Exercise Scientist Critiques Max Taylor Lifts Low Volume Training

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2024
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    0:00 Max Taylor
    3:40 Cardio and bodybuilding
    7:26 Warming Up
    10:02 Leg Press
    14:40 Failure training
    19:44 Straped up
    21:49 Mike's Rating
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Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @locomike102
    @locomike102 5 месяцев назад +4268

    If you're reading this Mike, your RP Hypertrophy app just tried to kill me. I didn't get sore in week 1 and told the app to do better next time--it took that shit personally. Today (day 1 of week 2) it cosplayed as the Iron Sheik and made me humble. DOMS incoming...

    • @foxdogs1st
      @foxdogs1st 5 месяцев назад +122

      I could see that. The idea of an app trying to generate a workout without
      Knowing what's going on in your body seems far fetched.

    • @Bjorn_R
      @Bjorn_R 5 месяцев назад +314

      The app needs data, the longer you use it, the better it gets.

    • @3h0wn3dm8
      @3h0wn3dm8 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@foxdogs1stthe best part is our brain has this thing called logic that you can use in tandem with the app!!

    • @Krebskasper
      @Krebskasper 5 месяцев назад

      @@3h0wn3dm8 please keep in mind that the ability to reason logically is a rare gift not bestowed on everyone and even then people surprise you every day....not in a positive way

    • @mikeplumb112
      @mikeplumb112 5 месяцев назад +36

      He didn't read it😔

  • @JRemy-rs9zk
    @JRemy-rs9zk 5 месяцев назад +2517

    I knew Dr. Mike was smart about exercising but my man is spitting straight FACTS about the DBZ characters. Impressive

    • @GermanJoe2
      @GermanJoe2 5 месяцев назад +64

      Spittin facts, the only good Gohan is mystic Gohan. Once he dropped that potara his career was over😂

    • @tamas9402
      @tamas9402 5 месяцев назад +125

      caught me off guard, had no idea dr mike was a FUCKIN NERD

    • @luislopeztrujillo5834
      @luislopeztrujillo5834 4 месяца назад +13

      Facts!? When he talks about gohan like that? Nah that’s foul af, it goes piccolo, vegeta, gohan… fym putting gohan at the bottom tf also kid gohan is 50% of gothenks aka coolest looking character of all time

    • @thor498
      @thor498 4 месяца назад

      He's a muscle nerd already ​@@tamas9402

    • @Jamhot71
      @Jamhot71 4 месяца назад +20

      Trunks >>> Gohan

  • @arielcastillo3513
    @arielcastillo3513 4 месяца назад +705

    Love Menzter for teaching the importance of warming up, keeping a journal, controlling the weight, making every set count and working the negative. It’s definitely brought my fitness game up.

    • @stensballe3683
      @stensballe3683 4 месяца назад +4

      warming up? 👎🏼. u should probably listen to more of de mikes videos

    • @d.staten1958
      @d.staten1958 3 месяца назад

      ​@@stensballe3683 Mike Menzter promoted warm up sets. Look up when he trained Marcus Reinhardt.

    • @galacticwafer3247
      @galacticwafer3247 3 месяца назад +38

      to me, warming up is light dynamic stretching to make sure nothing's messed up, then one set with as super-light weight to make sure my form is feeling right

    • @deansilva8401
      @deansilva8401 2 месяца назад +1

      That's what any good protocol should have though

    • @Handmedownbadboy
      @Handmedownbadboy Месяц назад

      It’s funny how dr Mike shits on mentzer and his 1 set to absolute failure protocol, but we still have DORIAN YATES WHO STILL CARRIES THIS PROTOCOL.
      Dr Mike even said you can get the same effects from many sets as you can by going 1 set to failure.
      So why do many sets over 1 set? If you’re achieving the same results, then surely less is more.

  • @piranhaman1044
    @piranhaman1044 4 месяца назад +982

    As a natty at 22 years old, switching to more of a Mike Mentzer approach has shown me insane results at a much faster rate compared to anything I've tried in the past.

    • @austin6996
      @austin6996 4 месяца назад +116

      same one set to failure per exercise is all you need just get in and get out no longer living at the gym lol

    • @piranhaman1044
      @piranhaman1044 4 месяца назад

      That and giving myself way more time for my body to rest I feel way stronger.@@austin6996

    • @robbertag808
      @robbertag808 4 месяца назад

      @@austin6996 B*llocks

    • @nischal711
      @nischal711 4 месяца назад +70

      I will say as someone who has done both remember to switch to more volume for a couple months and then goibg back to mentzer style.
      Also mentzer initial book showed 3 times a week semi full body style training.
      I honestly have done 2 full body days mike mentzer style training for 6 months and i was made some gains but around the 3rd month it started to slow down.
      So i switch to high volume after 6 months and my squat and deadlift blew up like crazy.

    • @larrytate1657
      @larrytate1657 4 месяца назад +37

      At 22 you can do more frequency than Mentzer program easily without overtraining. More volume was shown to yield better results than less volume in studies. But if you believe for you it’s opposite than keep at it.

  • @ashleykettle343
    @ashleykettle343 4 месяца назад +1898

    I think the reason Mike Mentzer has been having his day recently, is because his training protocols help less experienced lifters simplify their routine and teaches them to really push the intensity.
    Most people get their programs from fitness influencers who use all these half baked nuanced movements and do 20 sets per session 5-6 days a week. That’s a lot for your average joe who just wants to build some muscle.

    • @isaachenry3739
      @isaachenry3739 4 месяца назад +120

      Yea it gets hard as a beginner to try navigate which one of the 18 different lat variations to do lol, intensity and simplicity is great

    • @nates5703
      @nates5703 4 месяца назад +72

      Bang on. Most newbies (and even some intermediates) are simply not lifting heavy enough. I've lost track of the times I've seen people doing 10-15 quick, easy reps on something like the seated chest fly machine. And you can just see it's junk volume.
      Then the HIT people tell them, "You need to be lifting heavier and less," and of course, it works.

    • @prod.genesis
      @prod.genesis 4 месяца назад +21

      I can attest to this comment. i went from 135 to 165lbs (~12% bf) using random routines (basically just copying and pasting youtubers and bodybuilders) and doing as many drop sets as I could possibly do. Mentzer helped me actually understand intensity and the overall, basic principles of training. Since beginning to consume his content I reached 183lbs (upon weighing first thing in the morning) with about a ~15% bf. Now I feel much more comfortable expanding into different intensity techniques and increasing sets and volume. Not to mention, I'm able to weed out all the bullshit influencers much better. RP / Dr. Mike has played a huge role in this as well.

    • @jakeybball
      @jakeybball 4 месяца назад +29

      It’s also that he was a very decorated bodybuilder himself and coached Yates to a few Mr O’s. He walked the walk more than Dr. Mike, Jeff Nippard, Sam Sulek or anyone out there today. No clue why Mike is confused about this.

    • @larrytate1657
      @larrytate1657 4 месяца назад +21

      It’s because telling people they can do less for more results is going to be nice to hear.

  • @hipstertrudy3658
    @hipstertrudy3658 5 месяцев назад +376

    I think bc Mike was an objectivist the dogmatism of his positions is almost sought after in an industry where you can hear 10 different perspectives and someone resolve the differences by saying “do what works for you”. To hear him speak with such certainty and in a very articulate matter is pretty unique to the realm of body building

    • @michaelmccay123
      @michaelmccay123 4 месяца назад +18

      You summed it up perfectly. Wow.

    • @RoaringDaddyBear
      @RoaringDaddyBear 4 месяца назад

      Mentzer was a scam artist just trying to make a buck off clients who did not want to work hard or often. He used high volume when building his physique.

    • @danielponcianodiaz176
      @danielponcianodiaz176 4 месяца назад +7

      Yea wasn’t he a big Ayn Rand fan?

    • @kthuludev
      @kthuludev 4 месяца назад +7

      bro is the articulator

    • @evanjames3180
      @evanjames3180 2 месяца назад

      Well said , wanna write this essay for me ?

  • @cam-the-bassist
    @cam-the-bassist 4 месяца назад +703

    The appeal of Mike/Dorian's hit training for me is simply that I enjoy it. Training doesn't always have to be about the BEST method - it's about the method which gets you into the gym working hard. Personally, I mix HIT with dropsets and myoreps which I think inflates the volume significantly and it feels amazing. Compare my sessions of one working set to failure + myoreps/dropsets to the people who are grinding out 3-4 sets with rests in between - I'm out of there quicker to get on with my day. That's just my preference.

    • @donrobbiedeathstare272
      @donrobbiedeathstare272 4 месяца назад +65

      You’re completely right. There’s more than one route you can take to get to your destination. Everyone is so obsessed with proving their way is the best or shitting on another routine that they don’t tell the viewer about the fact that you can actually take numerous routes and it’s about what you enjoy getting in and doing the most

    • @MassaBroshi
      @MassaBroshi 4 месяца назад +35

      @@donrobbiedeathstare272 That's why the science is there, to objectively measure the differences in programming and Dr. Mike is an exercise scientist. That being said enjoyment is a major key. No point in what's hyper-optimal if you hate that shit.

    • @TravisH-nm9fy
      @TravisH-nm9fy 4 месяца назад +10

      As long as your training is progressive after 10 years youre going to reach your potential or close to it anyways. Volume can get you there faster but it also comes with more wear and tear on the bones, joints, tendons and ligaments.

    • @jlol933
      @jlol933 4 месяца назад +4

      Doesn’t myorep require you to do one set then rest, then do another set with pauses in between? That’s not really mentzer style training anymore. You’re hitting failure at last 2 or 3 times instead of just once for that exercise.
      Not saying it’s a good or bad way to train, just saying it doesn’t support the argument that mentzor style training is good because it’s not actually mentzer style training

    • @cam-the-bassist
      @cam-the-bassist 4 месяца назад +1

      @@jlol933 I go to failure, wait 10 seconds and then go again - I don’t have a spot so this is how I go past failure, along with dropsets. Pretty sure myoreps as Dr Mike describes them are where you take very short breaks to get more reps

  • @NJ-500
    @NJ-500 4 месяца назад +56

    The editing recently has been great, not too over the top, very smooth and well done. Keep it up

  • @rawrick01
    @rawrick01 5 месяцев назад +546

    The reason I watch you is because you make me laugh while learning makes learning fun.

    • @bloodsweatndtearz
      @bloodsweatndtearz 5 месяцев назад +4

      Nah fr been laughing nonstop at his comments 😭😭 cool guy

    • @patbl61
      @patbl61 5 месяцев назад

      Same

    • @a.s.6616
      @a.s.6616 5 месяцев назад

      I’m in binge watching mode as a sport student, golden stuff

    • @WeFit365
      @WeFit365 4 месяца назад

      Same

    • @tomashgrey5510
      @tomashgrey5510 4 месяца назад

      No, the main reason is you loving the toxic content

  • @benjiboy9907
    @benjiboy9907 5 месяцев назад +400

    I think the whole Mike Mentzer resurgence thing is mostly just an aesthetics thing. Mike competed in an era of bodybuilding that we now know was chock full of bro science and misinformation (literally watch any video of Arnold explaining his training, it’s actually comical how much volume he did), but in his training days he spoke in a way that sounds very reasonable and scientific, which I think gives him some ethos when combined with the whole underdog appeal. It helps that he was sort of kinda getting at what we know now about aiming for higher intensity and lower-ish volume on lifts. He definitely took it way too far tough, that’s for sure.

    • @isiahagonzales2935
      @isiahagonzales2935 5 месяцев назад +11

      Yeah that’s I think as well, we started to realize that it really was about effective reps and not so much just do a crap of volume. The amount of volume is going is going to vary a little depending on if your gonna bulking or cutting phase but 1 set to failure isn’t enough and going 15+ sets or more per week for a muscle group is also not as effective

    • @Mark-oq9fl
      @Mark-oq9fl 5 месяцев назад +79

      I think part of it is the illusion that you can go in, do your stuff quickly, get out, and tell yourself you are smarter than the guys working for a much longer period of time.

    • @Mantastic-ho3vm
      @Mantastic-ho3vm 5 месяцев назад +29

      Yet Arnold had the one of the best physiques ever. The problem is not overtraining but undertraining which far too many are guilty of.

    • @Mantastic-ho3vm
      @Mantastic-ho3vm 5 месяцев назад +21

      ​​@@Mark-oq9flExactly. Problem are looking for shortcuts. There aren't any. It takes a lot of time and effort to build a decent physique. The low volume crowd are delusional to even think they can get jacked in 40 minutes once or twice a week with barely any work. It's hilarious.

    • @Mantastic-ho3vm
      @Mantastic-ho3vm 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@isiahagonzales2935wrong. High volume works very well. Stop looking for shortcuts.

  • @ppietras97
    @ppietras97 Месяц назад +5

    Mentzer is becoming more popular because people are realizing that, even though he wasn’t entirely correct with all his methods, he still had a lot of knowledge on things like nutrition and training during a time where that kind of information just wasn’t readily available or even known as much as we do now.
    He’s finally getting the recognition he deserves.
    RIP to the uncrowned king of 1980

  • @mattys3248
    @mattys3248 4 месяца назад +10

    Loving the banter between the team! Keep it up!

  • @MemberWhen
    @MemberWhen 5 месяцев назад +378

    I get the point about cardio not being as important for fat loss, but what if you want like a healthy heart? Or to extend your life?

    • @KevinJDildonik
      @KevinJDildonik 5 месяцев назад +84

      This. Also, high rep lifting can be amazing cardio. So why not at LEAST have a few high rep days in your rotation to double up?

    • @JasonTheOneAndOnly
      @JasonTheOneAndOnly 5 месяцев назад +16

      this is my main reason for getting some jogging in

    • @buckyhurdle4776
      @buckyhurdle4776 5 месяцев назад +69

      I run anywhere from 2-10 miles a week and I will say my veins have gotten a lot bigger and are all more visible with zero pump. The last time I went to the doctor, they took my heart rate and they looked at me almost surprised and said "do you work out a lot?" So I think even just a little bit of running is really good, real runners would laugh at how much I run

    • @RustyNinja100
      @RustyNinja100 5 месяцев назад +132

      If body building is your profession, then running isn't great, but most of us should not train like a body builder.

    • @maximillian.a.m
      @maximillian.a.m 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@JasonTheOneAndOnlyjogging is for women (actually joking)

  • @mattnardo
    @mattnardo 5 месяцев назад +365

    If you're reading this Doc I recently applied your tips during my chest workout and I had amazing results like never before. You're the real deal. Thanks

    • @piotrgoacki9070
      @piotrgoacki9070 5 месяцев назад +9

      Same here, for me the Incline angle and stretch were game changing

    • @heibaimao
      @heibaimao 5 месяцев назад +1

      What are the tips?

    • @BrofUJu
      @BrofUJu 5 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@heibaimaoslow on the way down, really retract your shoulder blades and bring your chest up as you drop down on a chest or a fly. I do it on Seated cable flys and you feel like your pecs are gonna rip off its great lol

    • @aVenerable
      @aVenerable 5 месяцев назад +13

      ​@heibaimao Slow controlled eccentric with focus on maximising the weighted stretch plus a slight pause at the bottom. This will cost you to lower the weight but Quality reps are king

    • @heibaimao
      @heibaimao 5 месяцев назад

      How many sets do u guys do for chest a week?

  • @Saki630
    @Saki630 3 месяца назад +10

    The whole segment on the Dragonball hero hierarchy was worth the watch.

  • @gripm4040
    @gripm4040 3 месяца назад +13

    The thing with Mike Mentzer is mustaches are back in style and he is the undisputed king

  • @kneewizard6246
    @kneewizard6246 4 месяца назад +157

    Kudos to scott for editing in his disrespect, mike’s patience, and that final straw moment. Publicly shaming himself is a classy way to admit his mistake and atone

    • @hiddenleafshinobi2608
      @hiddenleafshinobi2608 4 месяца назад +16

      I don't understand what Scott even did wrong. Mike got really serious for no reason.

    • @drew.p.y
      @drew.p.y 4 месяца назад +33

      @@hiddenleafshinobi2608dw lol they were both just joking with each other, it’s a common thing on the channel.

    • @Matt_Alaric
      @Matt_Alaric 4 месяца назад +1

      @@drew.p.y Yeh nah, that didn't look like a joke and neither of them played it off like it was one.

    • @twizdestroyer1772
      @twizdestroyer1772 3 месяца назад +2

      @@Matt_Alaricthat was fs a joke 😭

    • @Matt_Alaric
      @Matt_Alaric 3 месяца назад

      @@twizdestroyer1772 Yeh nah, you just suck at reading people.

  • @StephenMarkTurner
    @StephenMarkTurner 5 месяцев назад +66

    I bought Mentzer's "Heavy Duty" about 25 years ago. 80% Ayn Rand, a little bit about training. His nutrition advice was the "4 food groups" poster I had on my classroom wall in the 60s.

    • @KevinJDildonik
      @KevinJDildonik 5 месяцев назад +37

      And just like Ayn Rand. Teenage boys love it. But as we become adults we should grow out of it. Daily reminder Ayn Rand died penniless and alone, sucking up Medicare.

    • @nathanwagester6665
      @nathanwagester6665 5 месяцев назад +28

      @@KevinJDildonikayn rand was a very mediocre philosopher that said nothing that Aristotle and John Locke handnt said before. Years behind her time in terms of where academic philosophy was. But of course, since she supported American ideology the public ate her up

    • @ifihadalifeiduseitwisely7589
      @ifihadalifeiduseitwisely7589 5 месяцев назад

      @@KevinJDildonik Truuu

    • @gabegabriel9288
      @gabegabriel9288 5 месяцев назад

      @@kpsiexlmao

    • @user-uq8yz3zq8d
      @user-uq8yz3zq8d 5 месяцев назад +1

      The DBZ tier list was perfection.

  • @213chewy
    @213chewy 4 месяца назад +9

    Goku was all about pushing yourself and going past your limits but also he understood the importance of recovery, Goku is the man and very inspiring

    • @alerixv
      @alerixv 5 дней назад +1

      Loved recovery so much he tossed Cell a senzu bean so he could recover too.

  • @michaelblacktree
    @michaelblacktree 4 месяца назад +11

    I wasn't even aware of Mentzer, until another channel advocated his training methods. Now it seems like everyone is talking about Mentzer. The internet is funny like that. But I decided to try HIT, just to see what's up. And I quickly realized how laid-back my normal training was. That helped put things in perspective.

  • @Wesbour
    @Wesbour 4 месяца назад +19

    Shoutout Scott the camera guy for always powering through 👍🏻

    • @LeonardoPostacchini
      @LeonardoPostacchini 4 месяца назад +9

      I was looking for a comment in support of Scott the camera guy. I am here for him too, the best camera angles in the fitness industry and he put up with Dr Mike kinks to boot.

  • @zackosborn1731
    @zackosborn1731 5 месяцев назад +99

    Mentzer is catching on because he's clear and understandable, and most people chronically overtrain or chronically do not have enough time to train. He fits a niche that hardcore bodybuilders and NEETS don't understand.

    • @playerzero2236
      @playerzero2236 5 месяцев назад

      💪

    • @molasorrosalom4846
      @molasorrosalom4846 5 месяцев назад +9

      Give me a break, he preys on those who don't know any better.

    • @warrenchu5752
      @warrenchu5752 4 месяца назад +18

      Like Dorian Yates?
      Poor guy had no idea. Another Olympia victim? Hahahaha

    • @fraserehl5894
      @fraserehl5894 3 месяца назад +19

      ​@@molasorrosalom4846 kinda hard to prey on people when you've been dead for over 20 years...

    • @skl5532
      @skl5532 3 месяца назад +6

      Most people on Average DO NOT overtrain. lol😂 Not even close. It’s way overrated. It takes a Lot to overtrain the body

  • @govdave007
    @govdave007 4 месяца назад +10

    This was the 1st of Dr. Mike’s critique videos that I’ve seen that was predominantly positive.

  • @DrLFV
    @DrLFV 4 месяца назад +4

    Thanks for the content. This channel is the best

  • @joshmoronstein
    @joshmoronstein 5 месяцев назад +42

    I've not seen anything about Mike Mentzer in ages and suddenly he's mentioned under every fitness video.

    • @Gargarks
      @Gargarks 5 месяцев назад +11

      It's kind of like fashion trends from decades prior. Every new generation rediscovers him and gets their mind blown until they try it out for a while and realize that they're not making any more progress. And then they continue to learn like we all did. I got on the Mike mentzer train about 20 years ago and had the same Journey that kids today are having with him.

    • @Mantastic-ho3vm
      @Mantastic-ho3vm 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@kpsiexpost physique to prove your claim.

    • @tiinan375
      @tiinan375 4 месяца назад

      @@kpsiex Bro you did not gain 44.8 lbs of muscle in 6 months and only 6 pounds of fat. If you did make a video or post your transformation

    • @sincorddnb9155
      @sincorddnb9155 4 месяца назад

      @@kpsiex Lets be real here, you're just another Methzer cultist that never touched the weight in life and making shit up to defend your idol. When this trend ends, you will also disappear.

    • @vaszhtas8126
      @vaszhtas8126 4 месяца назад

      ​@@kpsiexYou put on 44.8lbs of muscle in how long? What is the proper mindset/technique you claim to have? What exact program did you follow?

  • @brianduffy7384
    @brianduffy7384 5 месяцев назад +12

    Dr. Mike - Your content is incredible. Your humor opens the door to a whole host of knowledge concerning health and fitness. I started a casual gym-goer watching your videos for a laugh, and I enter 2024 with the Hypertrophy app downloaded, technique dialed in, and feeling better than ever. Thank you Dr. Mike - you rock!

  • @paulj505
    @paulj505 Месяц назад +3

    Because of my work and disability, I can go to gym only once per week. So I am exercising kind of like Mike Mentzer. I am doing rest-pauses, to failure then 15 breaths of break and to failure again, until I can't do no more reps. But I am only doing it with separation exercises. For the ones with compound movement, I am doing normal rep ranges and amount of sets. I am also going slow on positive and negative movement, with a bit of pause on contraction. I just started to train with this method, after a long break from gym, so I hope that it will work

  • @stixdude
    @stixdude 4 месяца назад

    BOOM SUBSCRIBED - i love this guy, please keep the brilliant content coming :D

  • @Aedantus
    @Aedantus 5 месяцев назад +9

    Physician here..always appreciate a good Dr Oz dig

  • @SergeyLifts
    @SergeyLifts 5 месяцев назад +72

    Damn I just noticed RP got almost 1Mln subscribers! Wow it's been so long!

  • @lionace1625
    @lionace1625 4 месяца назад +1

    Bro you killed me witn the uncut segment pitch with you fighting the camera man 😂 I love the content

  • @digitalsickness4
    @digitalsickness4 4 месяца назад +28

    I think the Mike Mentzer and HIT resurgence is mostly because people appreciate his ability to articulate a more seemingly scientific approach to bro science back in the day. I myself tried low volume high intensity training and quickly realized that its implications are that after a phase of high volume training, the body may respond very well to reduced volume giving short term results, but after adapting to low volume, it ends up not being enough to stimulate growth for many body parts (shoulders, arms, chest, lats, quads, calves), which goes against the whole philosophy of one set to failure if more sets are required. Good concept but factoring in athleticism and how it changes depending on physical activity, you really can't just generalize one set to failure as the end all be all for any muscle group.

    • @sebbiesydenham3077
      @sebbiesydenham3077 4 месяца назад +10

      Talking about bro science… very ironic

    • @digitalsickness4
      @digitalsickness4 4 месяца назад

      What does this mean?@@sebbiesydenham3077

    • @thewisedaddy6460
      @thewisedaddy6460 4 месяца назад

      I personally just do 2 sets to failure instead of one on those specific body parts you've mentioned and it always ended up being enough for me. If it doesn't work for you then keep trying until you find what works for you! We are not the same and don't have to be so do what's good for you .

    • @Matt_Alaric
      @Matt_Alaric 4 месяца назад +1

      Yeh your anecdote isn't evidence or science, it's essentially exactly the same bro science you're complaining about.

    • @digitalsickness4
      @digitalsickness4 4 месяца назад

      ​@@Matt_Alaric What is the point of this comment??? I get it, I'm wrong, but why? Where is your opinion and experience?
      Help me understand why you need to state the obvious that my comment is not evidence or science, but it was never stated as such either.
      I will wait for your condescending reply...
      Cancel
      Reply

  • @kl7985
    @kl7985 5 месяцев назад +20

    Came for the workout critique, stayed for the DB breakdown!

  • @sexygoblin8575
    @sexygoblin8575 5 месяцев назад +41

    I kept going heavier and heavier made no major gains this last half year ,cut the weight down last month by 50 to 25% on my lifts slow controlled good squeeze ,and I'm gaining again wild stuff I always thought you had to go heavy following Mike's advice , and my nervous system isn't fried all the time now actually life changing

    • @Antonio_Serdar
      @Antonio_Serdar 5 месяцев назад +8

      I have the opposite results.
      Always made the best gains in the 4-7 rep range going heavy af.
      Higher reps never did anything for me

    • @TrueLife..
      @TrueLife.. 5 месяцев назад +2

      I'm going to bet you probably didn't have a spotter 24/7 right? That style of training is only ever worth it when you have a dedicated lifting partner who allows you to stick with egregiously epic form, pushes you more via motivation, and often helps you a bit on the last rep or 2 when your form begins to break down.

    • @Antonio_Serdar
      @Antonio_Serdar 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@TrueLife..
      I know a lot of people in the gym so asked for spotters on barbell exercises, otherwise I can go to failure alone.
      The problem with high reps for me is I find it hard to reach true muscular failure because there is too much metabolic fatigue built up, so you give up more because of the burn than the actual muscle not being able to do more reps.

    • @BurnerTurner
      @BurnerTurner 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@TrueLife..agreed them partner assisted reps are fookin magical

    • @excuseyou1526
      @excuseyou1526 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@Antonio_Serdar I think current sport science is mostly agnostic on any one best rep range within that 5-30 rep window. Issue is 4-7 reps can mean reps with standardized form, full ROM and 3s controlled eccentrics or quarter repping a squat with zero control or standardization. For most people "going heavy" is synonymous with dogshit half reps.

  • @nameless5r
    @nameless5r 4 месяца назад +1

    I can't tell you how many videos from this channel I've watched but i never subscribed. The fact that this man understands dbz the way he does is what just prompted me to subscribe.

  • @GayBearBro2
    @GayBearBro2 2 месяца назад +1

    Always love a Dr. Mike video when he puts his full bear on display ❤

  • @aegorrivers6700
    @aegorrivers6700 5 месяцев назад +33

    Dragonball Z tier list is the content I'm subscribed for

    • @alexandersims1613
      @alexandersims1613 5 месяцев назад +4

      Absolutely pro list.
      Only missing Gotenks who is both the most underutilized character and has the most unique creative techniques.
      If Dr. Mike was a Saiyan, his Ki attacks would be silly and ridiculous like Gotenks.

    • @alexandersims1613
      @alexandersims1613 5 месяцев назад

      @@nickf.6027 Gohan is a little bitch and should be cut from dragon ball. He's easily the worst character in the series.

  • @destiny.cookie
    @destiny.cookie 5 месяцев назад +20

    As, a beginner your advice is a godsend. Currently 3rd weeks at the gym and all your crtique videos help out a ton with form and everything. Thank you

  • @Something.Is.Out.There22
    @Something.Is.Out.There22 2 месяца назад +5

    RIP to the man, the myth, the legend, Akira Toriyama

  • @jordonwade5002
    @jordonwade5002 4 месяца назад +1

    I really enjoy these videos. It’s like watching CinemaSins, but for workout videos. Keep it up Dr. Mike!

  • @Nebulaoblivion
    @Nebulaoblivion 5 месяцев назад +10

    mike, bro, doctor. you are not grotesque, you’re a very handsome guy with a fantastic voice.

  • @benjiboy9907
    @benjiboy9907 5 месяцев назад +4

    I would love to see you guys to a training session with Max.

  • @RokoJelavic-ih6ws
    @RokoJelavic-ih6ws 4 месяца назад +22

    Mike Mentzer is great because training like that is more fun and simpler (no periodization). That makes people go to the gym more consistently (fun) and it works better because of that for most people. Also, it works better since most people can't do periodization correctly if they need to. Another reason it works better is it incurs less systemic fatigue and it takes less of your time. So yeah, if you're a pro then it's not optimal but for most people it's actually optimal.

    • @AnabolicTeen2006
      @AnabolicTeen2006 4 месяца назад

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂❤😂❤❤❤ww❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😂❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

    • @connorhall8463
      @connorhall8463 4 месяца назад +3

      You’re point about “systemic fatigue” is just wrong and your other point is just that people are lazy. You can train however you want and yes it’s true that the best program is the one that’s gonna keep you coming back to the gym but the need to justify it is kinda silly.

    • @RokoJelavic-ih6ws
      @RokoJelavic-ih6ws 4 месяца назад

      Where does the need to deload come from if not systemic fatigue? @@connorhall8463

    • @icetray2727
      @icetray2727 2 месяца назад +2

      @@connorhall8463​​⁠​⁠I would agree if people aren’t doing anything besides going to the gym. However, if you have a full time job, coupled with a social life and hobbies, is it really people being lazy?

    • @blakeslide6919
      @blakeslide6919 2 дня назад

      @@icetray2727 No dude! You're lazy! you have to lift hours a day 5-6x's a week to look good, you also have to ignore all the natural systems your body has in place to tell you when it needs to rest and buy expensive pre-workouts to maintain energy level's as well as protein powder, because hey how are you going to have good meals with all that lifting you gotta do? Dude look at "X" bodybuilder! (This is sarcastic, please look into HIT training, it doesn't even need to be Mike Mentzer's routines, many other people have routines as well.)

  • @alwinholvast2702
    @alwinholvast2702 4 месяца назад

    loved the humour in this video, good stuff my dude

  • @steelmongoose4956
    @steelmongoose4956 5 месяцев назад +59

    Mentzer worked off of some basic physiological principles to create very interesting hypotheses. The idea that there’s a minimum stimulus required to create growth and that going beyond that may overtax the system and interfere with recovery is very interesting. There’s some sense to it, and it’s certainly worth exploring.
    The problem comes when you start treating your hypothesis as a conclusion without sufficient experimentation. The most attractive and reasonable hypotheses sometimes don’t survive rough contact with reality.
    There’s a certain occult attraction to Mentzer’s ideas as well. If there really is a golden standard for hypertrophy that’s hard to see and requires *less* time and volume than others are putting in, you’d have to feel pretty special if you knew about it, wouldn’t you? Again, though, he starts with an obvious truth (like diminishing returns for high volume) and then confects a hypothesis in the opposite direction that has no more scientific underpinning than the the idea he doesn’t like.
    A lot of the Mentzer ideas work well for me, but I’m not a bodybuilder. I’m integrating strength training with a whole lot of general performance stuff, and hypertrophy is incidental to that (though I do get strength and some mass out of my HIT-like stuff).

    • @steelmongoose4956
      @steelmongoose4956 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@kpsiex No, that was me, just now. But anyone who understands scientific method is capable of saying roughly the same thing.

    • @pablov1323
      @pablov1323 5 месяцев назад +1

      It is very convenient for most of the people to think that you can get a great natty body by doing one set and spending in the gym 45 mins three times a week...if only that was the case...

    • @idx1941
      @idx1941 5 месяцев назад +5

      Mentzer DID NOT build is body via the methods he SOLD to the public (several years after he retired). He built his body the same way all bodybuilders of his era did. The first book he published after he retired was in 1982. It contains typical training advice and even included Olympic weight lifting exercises. But Mentzer knew he could not make a living from this. So he came up with HIT as a way to generate income for himself. He made a good living training people privately...and you can train more people in a day making them do HIT than he could with conventional training methods. But hey, don't let facts get in the way.

    • @steelmongoose4956
      @steelmongoose4956 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@idx1941 Nothing you said has anything to do with what I posted, though. The original question dealt with the resurgent interest in Mentzer’s ideas. What did I say that you think you’re contradicting? And where did you come by the information that Mentzer developed a fake training system solely to bilk a few clients out of their hard-earned cash? Some of his trainees apparently did pretty well and still swear by his ideas. I think the body of scientific research calls them into doubt, at least in part. I have no problem accusing Mentzer of treating an hypothesis like a conclusion, but I don’t have any evidence of anything more sinister.

    • @steelmongoose4956
      @steelmongoose4956 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@pablov1323 As I said, the general principles work for me, but I’m not going for outlandish hypertrophy. I just look like a strong, athletic old guy. But I’m also doing a lot of swimming, riding, and martial arts work. I have to assume that it’s not the greatest protocol for pure hypertrophy, simply because most people concerned with that are succeeding with other approaches.

  • @ParvParashar
    @ParvParashar 4 месяца назад +21

    Excellent video! Highly appreciate the amazing advice. Thanks! 🙏

  • @dinolopez6652
    @dinolopez6652 4 месяца назад

    Dude your Commentary is spot on and funny as hell!!!😂😅

  • @jima6545
    @jima6545 12 дней назад

    Just came across your channel recently. An old school bodybuilder/oly weightlifter from the 1940's was way ahead of the curve on this. He had some other very interesting philosophies regarding mass gains. His name was was Louis Abele, and he was a beast

  • @Mastobog
    @Mastobog 5 месяцев назад +22

    The Mentzer resurgence is part of a larger cultural zeitgeist of disbelief in the contemporary knowledge of academics, preferring to believe that singular individuals have the "real" answers.
    It's the same thing in many areas these days...

    • @marlonrodney2457
      @marlonrodney2457 5 месяцев назад +4

      Very insightful point

    • @ivk4808
      @ivk4808 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@kpsiex If someone dedicates years of their life for a doctorate in a field, I believe their authority trumps mine in said field. That doesn't mean that I should blindly believe everything they say, but it does mean that their opinion probably holds more weight than mine.

    • @blakeslide6919
      @blakeslide6919 2 дня назад +1

      Well, you could blame what is going on by the general abuse and conning occurring throughout all structures of society, not just academics, but it extends into politics as well. You do know we are living in a time where politicians have connections to a certain man who had a certain island and was convicted of SA against children, no? You also know that academics has found it okay to teach children that gender is something that is on a spectrum and allows men dressed as women to read children's stories to said children. This is supported by the same politicians who I was initially writing about, not to mention, they control a lot of those academic structures.
      So yeah, excuse us for being a little subjective of what we have to accept as fact.

  • @benjamindavis2475
    @benjamindavis2475 5 месяцев назад +71

    Low volume made me strong and small. More sets and more frequency is what finally made my arms grow after years of power lifting. I do 1 compound and 1 isolation exercise twice a week. (Row + curls) and then (pulldown + curls). Similar routine for triceps. For forearms i do wrist curls 2x a week and reverse curls 1x a week.
    So 12 sets biceps, 12 sets triceps, 9 sets forearms a week. They are blowing up 😊

    • @JohnDoe-fz7hz
      @JohnDoe-fz7hz 5 месяцев назад +1

      After a long time of being disappointed by myself for not being able to lift as heavy as I wished for and of course not seeing much results in the mirror I got down a little bit in weights and doing more reps and sets. I got stronger and yes I grew more. I prefer a quite easy workout with not so many different exercises. For example, Dumbbell deadlifts, bench presses on slightly incline shrugs, and for arms skull crushers and hammer curls. I do the heavy ones with a barbell one or two times a week

    • @IS-vy2yh
      @IS-vy2yh 5 месяцев назад +1

      Wait. If you do wrist curls 2x and reverse curls, thats 3 sets in total. Where did the 9 sets for forearms come from? I would also like to see your program, as I find myself being strong and small also.

    • @shyft09
      @shyft09 5 месяцев назад +7

      ​@IS-vy2yh I'm assuming each time he says he does an exercise it's a classic 3 sets of 12 or 12,10,8 or whatever

    • @adam-lt8iy
      @adam-lt8iy 5 месяцев назад +1

      Because you can't train with proper intensity. Frequency and volume suits weaklings like yourself better indeed.

    • @EnigmaticAnamoly
      @EnigmaticAnamoly 5 месяцев назад +4

      Same here. I did low volume, low-medium frequency for a while and while i did get really strong, hypertrophy was nonexistent until i took a little weight off and increased my volume and frequency. I feel sorry for all the naive beginners out there who will miss out on a lot of gains because they fell for the MM/HIT tropes.
      That being said, HIT and low frequency can absolutely yield results as well...particularly in people who are experienced lifters and already have a considerable amount of muscle mass 👍

  • @kevinklopfer9146
    @kevinklopfer9146 4 месяца назад +15

    Good video, very objective.
    For me, training for muscle failure 3 times a week with a full body workout and about 2-3 sets per muscle works very well. But because I just don't have time to train more at the moment. I think if you have a lot of time, and I used to have that, then more volume and less intensity works. People simply have to adapt to the life situation. Many roads lead to Rome.
    Thanks for the good explanation as always!

    • @rico14
      @rico14 4 месяца назад +1

      I think that’s what works best for me. Since I also train mma as well. I can’t lift 6 times a week and train mma.

    • @benh6452
      @benh6452 4 месяца назад

      I train all the time low weight high volume it works good for me

  • @theguywithone
    @theguywithone 4 месяца назад

    I love your channel and your content. You are my go to for fitness. Period. I'm subscribed.
    ⭐️Would you be able to do a video on that BMI chart? BullS#!+ Mass Index or not?
    I'm 6'2" tall at 180 lbs. and my doctor says that I am overweight. Thank you

  • @feitanthegoat
    @feitanthegoat 4 месяца назад +11

    bro's in a relationship with his video guy😂

  • @DrewLSsix
    @DrewLSsix 5 месяцев назад +36

    I also follow the Mike Mentzer philosophy, i lifted for a few years, wasnt as good as Arnold, threw a tantrum and quit, and now im looking to spin my failure into a profitable self help style scheme.

    • @dakidd729
      @dakidd729 4 месяца назад

      Hopefully one day you will have sex with a woman too

  • @hovhannesbeaver8161
    @hovhannesbeaver8161 2 месяца назад +1

    Dude, I’ve never paid for any extra content on RUclips videos but damn… you tempt me. You’re good…
    …Too good.

  • @AydenGibbons
    @AydenGibbons Месяц назад

    Max got me into lifting and I love his video. I’m writing this at the start. Gonna reply with the takeaways

  • @vajbon3419
    @vajbon3419 4 месяца назад +24

    Ever since I started training low volume, I've had good results, I'm out of the gym in ~ 30-45 minutes, which leaves me a lot of time to do other things that I love, and I don't walk around tired all day from all the volume that used to tax me so much systemically.

    • @tioswift3676
      @tioswift3676 4 месяца назад

      Any good programs you recommend?

    • @sirslime1687
      @sirslime1687 4 месяца назад

      Also it’s more forgiving on your nervous system

    • @hurpaderpp
      @hurpaderpp 4 месяца назад +2

      Its great to do cycles of high intensity training. But you want to cycle back to high volume too.

    • @movestattoo4561
      @movestattoo4561 4 месяца назад +1

      @@sirslime1687if you go to failure all the time every time you train that fries your nervous system way more than higher volume and not going to failure.

    • @fastlifebmx9292
      @fastlifebmx9292 3 месяца назад

      ​@@movestattoo4561Not true if you're training every 4-7 days or more. It leaves tons of time for recovery (and trust me , you'll need it, even if your workout is less than 30 minutes and 2 sets per muscle group).

  • @MaDie23
    @MaDie23 5 месяцев назад +6

    „No head on my hair“ same bro, same

  • @IronMike5
    @IronMike5 4 месяца назад +1

    On the topic of training to failure, I think the only "advantage" training to failure has over going very very very close to failure is that it's much easier for someone to tell if they hit failure or not than if they had only one rep left, when they very well could've had three challenging, hard reps left. As Mike said, in terms of what you gain, there's essentially no difference. Both are great approaches to training.

  • @johnpaulst.hilaire4835
    @johnpaulst.hilaire4835 4 месяца назад

    Bro you're subscribers are increasing so fast!!!

  • @RafaelW8
    @RafaelW8 5 месяцев назад +5

    I want Dr.Mike to push me all the way to failure 👉🏻👈🏻

  • @Bong.
    @Bong. 5 месяцев назад +12

    That one tape where he breaks down what having a philosophy is and leaving the fate of your soul up to chance really opened up my way of thinking

    • @vaszhtas8126
      @vaszhtas8126 4 месяца назад

      Do you have a link or any way I could find it?

    • @Bong.
      @Bong. 4 месяца назад

      @@vaszhtas8126 mike mentzer philosophy who needs it

  • @mmelling4410
    @mmelling4410 4 месяца назад

    Absolutely hilarious and informal. Perfection

  • @josephdavis3472
    @josephdavis3472 3 часа назад

    Huge advantage to walking instead of running, You can watch Renaissance Periodization while you do your steps!
    But on a serious note, it allows you to listen to something _other_ than music, if you want to study, research, or be entertained. Very under-rated.

  • @michaeldjguardianmeans6281
    @michaeldjguardianmeans6281 5 месяцев назад +5

    There is a work out series of scenes in the “Silent Night” movie that’s in the theaters.
    I would love for you to critique that when you have access to the video. I’d be super curious about your assessment.

  • @rebel1608
    @rebel1608 5 месяцев назад +7

    The Mentzer resurgence is because its attractive in that one set to failure is 1) fast, no giant workouts and 2) fun as shit if you have the right mindset. Granted, he wasn't right and studies show that, but its not like it will NOT grow you, so people see results which means its not easily disprovable at the individual level. Ultimately anything that is the One True Secret that is also a shortcut will be popular.

    • @steelmongoose4956
      @steelmongoose4956 5 месяцев назад +3

      I train using HIT principles, and it works beautifully within my overall fitness regimen. It’s helped me gain strength and some mass in my 50’s, but my focus is a balanced approach of strength, endurance, and mobility. If I were all about hypertrophy (especially at a competitive level), I have doubts that it would outperform conventional protocols.

    • @warrenchu5752
      @warrenchu5752 4 месяца назад +4

      That 1 set will beat your nervous system up more than your entire volume training.
      It isn't a shortcut if you do it properly. It's blood and guts for a reason.

  • @ROLLERBUG
    @ROLLERBUG 4 месяца назад +1

    Dr. Mike, your workout formula is the book of revolations to my muscles. Fried, totally fried when I do like you said, "Iniolate your muscles every time you go in the gym" Thank you. When I did slow mo squats, all these flaws started showing, from standing to the floor, there are phases of a squat. A little under 2/3 the way down, bottom pause, one foot from bottom, all three have issues to keep in line. Have you heard of Cybergenics? I did Cybergenics two times 90-91, the workout was very similar to your methods. I am addicted to slow motion reps now, never going back to bro reps. 😂

  • @raydenshumock
    @raydenshumock 4 месяца назад +2

    Hey Mike just found ya! I’m now you’re 1 millionth subscriber!! Boy am I glad I came across you, ur the man!!

  • @inkwell101
    @inkwell101 5 месяцев назад +10

    Scott the Video Guy's insolence needs to be addressed in his year end performance review, Dr Mike.

  • @mr.jds-_-
    @mr.jds-_- 5 месяцев назад +8

    "Ugh I gotta do work at my job" me everyday 😂

  • @davidrichardson6613
    @davidrichardson6613 3 месяца назад

    Watching your triceps flex when you get passionate about bad info is funny. LUV IT!!!

  • @thecorneliusexperience
    @thecorneliusexperience 4 месяца назад +1

    Mike, how...you aren't real. Your knowledge of not only fitness but comedy and DBZ and anime in general never ceases to amaze me

  • @danielcolvin1611
    @danielcolvin1611 5 месяцев назад +10

    Max is the real deal. In for a future collab between Max and the Doc

  • @ArrggghhhhJohn
    @ArrggghhhhJohn 4 месяца назад +4

    Mike Menzters approach appeals to 2 types of people:
    1. Those who want to get in and out of the gym in under 45 mins, and not having to go 3,4 5 times a week (in short those short on free time)
    and
    2. People who love to hammer their muscles into oblivion and not have to worry about having enough time to recover. That said, the mental fortitude needed to do that on so few sets takes a certain type of person.
    I tried it, it wasn't for me, RP app all the way and getting results on just 3 full body workouts per week

  • @Mr.MattP.E.
    @Mr.MattP.E. 3 месяца назад +2

    9:00-10:00 speaking my language Mike! Vegeta is the man.

  • @p.o.6562
    @p.o.6562 4 месяца назад

    Damn, 1Mio Followers for Christmas, it was so close. Keeps up RP and celebrate anyways🎉

  • @KZ-kl8fx
    @KZ-kl8fx 4 месяца назад +6

    Love to see Dana White trying new things

  • @HenchPig
    @HenchPig 5 месяцев назад +3

    Dr Mike!
    Pls make a video with an example program for a Jiujitsu athlete who trains daily and needs some strength for their sport but has a lot of joint soreness?
    Should I do a main lift for the day heavy and just use smaller accessory movements to build muscle mass?
    I find this generally much better on my body and body composition is improving!

    • @blakeslide6919
      @blakeslide6919 2 дня назад

      Rest my dude, You are an athlete who is doing a lot of wrestling daily and you also want to lift heavy? And you wonder why your joints are sore? Try Mike's consolidation routine. But it sounds like you need to give yourself some more time to breathe.

  • @danielnstr
    @danielnstr 2 месяца назад

    Tha fact that you comment on the DBZ tattoos is awesome!

  • @rookincharge2780
    @rookincharge2780 4 месяца назад

    Def getting ready for a show cause I saw dude before and he looked twice as big. Crazy what bodybuilders put themselves through.

  • @LightoKun
    @LightoKun 4 месяца назад +3

    Mike Mentzer is great because his style of training gives people more progress rather than spamming PPL 6 times a week with RPE style boring training and constant tired and no time to recover inbetween workouts.

  • @tren714
    @tren714 4 месяца назад +5

    Switched from one set to failure to getting close to failure on 2-3 sets has changed my physique tremendously. With that being said, do what works for you. Mike Mentzer way might work for some but not all.

    • @ayda2876
      @ayda2876 4 месяца назад

      exactly, idk why everyone wants to pick a side so badly

    • @adam-lt8iy
      @adam-lt8iy 4 месяца назад +1

      Was the exact opposite for me.

  • @aech7150
    @aech7150 Месяц назад

    Mike mentzer is regaining popularity because it answers what the public wants to hear. The answer to growing is simple, doesnt take much time, and is just a mental challenge to get to failure.
    That being said, it can be legitimately effective, and the guy endorsing it looked incredible

  • @MSHNKTRL
    @MSHNKTRL 4 месяца назад +1

    My pre-workout drank recipe: 1/4 cup sea salt, 1/4 cup Jack3d (I got connections), and 4 cups Himalayan bull milk

  • @glcedits
    @glcedits 5 месяцев назад +18

    i think the mike mentzer training method has come more to light from tnf(you should react to tnf) due to tnfs highly science based training and personally i enjoy the fewer sets(1 set i believe just isnt enough) and higher intensity and ive seen quite good progress from when i started HIT. Id really love you to react to tnf since id like too see the agrees and disagreements. Love the channel doc

    • @juanmejiagomez5514
      @juanmejiagomez5514 4 месяца назад

      Yeah, at the end of the day it’s about finding what works for you in terms of volume vs intensity. If you keep your intensity really high for all sets you’ll need less volume, on the other hand if you raise your volume you’ll need a bit less intensity. Dr. Mike usually goes for higher volume I think due to stimulus to fatigue ratio, but personally I think you should do what helps you being more consistent. I enjoy high volume for arms or chest, but I hate doing squats, I can’t do more than 2 sets per day without wanting to delete myself and taking way more time than necessary because I’m dreading it. So instead I just push those 2 sets to the limit and then I’m done with it

  • @mrhardway5278
    @mrhardway5278 4 месяца назад +3

    I did Mike Mentzer’s program for 90 days, I read his book but sadly I didn’t see the results I wanted. I go to school and work so I liked the idea of having to spend less time in the gym but to still get great results. I only made gains in my legs and dead lift and I got fatter eating my normal calories. I don’t regret trying it but I will stick to a more traditional weight lifting program.

    • @blakeslide6919
      @blakeslide6919 2 дня назад

      You probably weren't doing it right. Lifting properly isn't something you learn in 90 days. I've lifted for years and I still feel like a noob.

  • @VanjaBatarelo
    @VanjaBatarelo Месяц назад

    For H.I.T training.My personal experience follows like this,so i used to do moderate to high volume training and yes it was cool pumping non stop but my gains were really slow,sometimes it stopped completely.And i was lost in training,i had no inspiration to train because of the stop of my gains,i saw no change in muscle definition or growth.And when i wanted to give up training,Mike Mentzer became really popular so i decided to try out low volume/moderate volume high intensity training.With this change my gains came instantly,even faster and more than before.Before while it took me for example 4 weeks to increase weight,with this system im either increasing the weight or reps per week or training.My bench press pr was 70kg for a long time and 2 days ago i hit 100kg(225lbs) for 5 reps for 3 sets.I think that says enough about Mike Mentzers training system.

  • @RastaMitchVlogs
    @RastaMitchVlogs 11 дней назад

    love it, these videos double as comedy and fitness lol

  • @firstname3255
    @firstname3255 5 месяцев назад +4

    I started training one year ago. I workout at planet fitness using all machines and some dumbbells. I do Mike Mentzers workout routine you can find on RUclips. I started doing upper lower 4 days out the week. Then moved to 2-3 days. Eventually I moved it to chest triceps then legs then back shoulder biceps. As you get stronger you need more rest. I also used to superset everything, now I just do one set of every exercise because recovery was taking longer. I was 150lbs last year and as of today I’m 178lbs. I’ve also gotten leaner so the majority of that has to have been muscle. Heavy Duty all the way! Looking at 190-195 hopefully in the next year!

    • @pauldavies7251
      @pauldavies7251 5 месяцев назад +2

      That's what's called newbie gains, absolutely nothing to do with mike mentzer,
      As a newbie any stimulus will make you grow, but the more advanced you get you need more intensity , load & volume to stimulate growth.
      Your body only grows as a last resort when it has no other option

    • @warrenchu5752
      @warrenchu5752 4 месяца назад +1

      Now do Dorian Yates. Guess he isn't advanced? Hahahaha

    • @promo130
      @promo130 4 месяца назад

      horrible, better stay home. useless

    • @pauldavies7251
      @pauldavies7251 4 месяца назад +1

      @@warrenchu5752 dorian didn't train anything ilike what mentzer advocated,
      His back day was 8 exercises in total & his leg days were 7 exercises,
      Apart from 1 top set they trained nothing alike

    • @warrenchu5752
      @warrenchu5752 4 месяца назад

      Source "trust me bro"
      As a client of Dorian, I can outright exclaim that you are full of sh*t

  • @bigmatt_9363
    @bigmatt_9363 3 месяца назад +3

    “No head on my hair”😂

  • @lukasbuivydas9341
    @lukasbuivydas9341 Месяц назад

    Mike the gift that keeps on giving 😂 the DBZ character tier list mid review is iconic

  • @oguztuncar8198
    @oguztuncar8198 5 месяцев назад +4

    What I like most about Mike Menzer's philosophy is making sure you pass the stimulus threshold when you reach failure. Maybe working with 2 RIR is enough, but how do you know how far you are from failure before you reach the failure?
    I have observed many people that in situations where they think they cant do more, they are actually able to do 4-5 more reps when they are really push.

  • @dryrunhd
    @dryrunhd 5 месяцев назад +4

    So when is the RP shop gonna start selling the 100% authentic Dr. Mike fur sweaters?

  • @eduarddez4416
    @eduarddez4416 4 месяца назад

    I used to do 4 sets per exercise with some left in the tank.
    I combined what i did previously and the metzner style and i am doing 2-3 sets MAX, Trying to reach failure betwren 8-10 reps. And added one more day of rest each week ( from 6 times a week to 5 times a week training)
    Even after one year of lifting , I've seen an increase in strenght after every session , barbell squats , incline bench etc.

  • @a.t.g.official
    @a.t.g.official 2 месяца назад

    Much love💚

  • @stevenroberts5741
    @stevenroberts5741 5 месяцев назад +27

    I’ve always liked Mike Mentzer, but Mike didn’t find out about HIT until his early 20’s via Casey aviator introducing him to Arthur Jones. If you look at pictures of Mentzer in his teens you can see he had most of his muscle mass (via conventional training) prior to finding the HIT/Heavy Duty methodology. As I say, always been a MM fan, so not hating, but a lot of HIT fans who quote Mentzer seem to assume he used the method to gain his mass, which he generally didn’t. He was already big by 18 years old.

    • @davorzdralo8000
      @davorzdralo8000 4 месяца назад +6

      He never used those methods to train, he just sold that bullshit to other people

    • @kobemop
      @kobemop 4 месяца назад +2

      The original routine he followed was quite high in volume. Even in his later years of bodybuilding, Franco caught him having long sessions at the gold's gym.

    • @JustSomeGuy69420
      @JustSomeGuy69420 4 месяца назад

      Casey Aviator looool

  • @wilko4085
    @wilko4085 4 месяца назад +3

    Training to “technical failure” not “muscular failure”. Meaning to the point your technique starts to go. This philosophy automatically keeps you “near failure” and not to “absolute failure” as people misinterpret.
    Mike mentzer states “1 working set” but you are supposed to do 3 sets of medium-heavy loads prior to the working set for every exercise - its not just warmup sets. This increases the volume to technically 4 sets not 1.
    Menzter program is about reducing muscle fatigue to allow you to train at 100% every session rather than at 80% due to not fully recovering between sessions when you do higher volume sessions.
    Volume in mentzer programming is referred to volume in total kg moved (set x reps x weight). Not in sets x reps - at heavy loads to near failure there is actually a lot more volume moved than expected.
    It’s also the hypertrophic principles of rest/pause technique, slow eccentric, fast concentric, and full range that amplifies the results.

  • @kidkoopa6389
    @kidkoopa6389 4 месяца назад +1

    Dr. Mike! Can we PLEASE get a video of you training Scott the Video Guy?! We need a SCOTT REVEAL.

  • @mrfryingpanowo1100
    @mrfryingpanowo1100 4 месяца назад +1

    I think a lot of what he said massively influences modern theories of nutrition, like the fact that you don't need to eat anything specifically to lose weight just be in a calorie deficit, and about exercise when he said light exercise is better for losing fat. Also about training style. He pointed out that as you get stronger and lift more and more weight, your muscles wont recognise the difference between benching 60kg in your first year of training and benching 100kg in your second year of training, but your immune system sure does. So when you train more intensely the load on your immune system is decreases and the load on your muscles increases.
    I could go on and on about the things he said because even if he didnt discover it, he popularised it, in a time where the popular media was telling people to do this or take that to lose weight or train 3 hours a day 6 days a week to be a bodybuilder. When it just wasnt necessary. When compared to what he was up against his theory held pretty good weight (no pun intended).
    And there have been a lot of success story's of especially natural lifters reaching a wall in their growth and going from training 5-6 days a week to 3-4 times a week and seeing growth again. So its not like what he was saying was incorrect. I feel an appreciation for what he said is required, and with the general premise of his arguments. Even if you dont just do one set.
    And to finish up, i feel the biggest reason he got popular was because of the absolute robbery that was the 1980 olympia. He probably got more popular out of pity, just like Platz in 81 and Levrone getting second place 4 times. Not because any of them were, dare I say, completely outstanding in bodybuilding history. People may also take pity on him because his achievements and philosophy were totally overshadowed and he didnt get the recognition he deserved because of it.
    He reminds me of the psychologist Freud (if you dont know who he is, look him up). He made a psychological theory called the psychodynamic approach in the 1800's, and although it was a leading theory, it was massively ridiculed for a lot of the absurd suggestions it made (such as the Oedipus complex; look it up for a good laugh). But as time went on psychologists found evidence of what he was saying about the unconscious part of our brain being responsible for so much of our behaviour, thoughts, feelings, motivations, etc.
    I heard a very interesting comment on Instagram about mike Mentzer which I'm just gonna leave here. "Mentzer was ahead of his time, but he isn't ahead of our time".

  • @karllehel
    @karllehel 4 месяца назад +4

    Well Dorian Yates applied Mentzers style and he won Olympia, Get in now Doc? Answer.