Since the calves are perhaps the hardest part of the body for most bodybuilders to develop properly, and since they usually lag behind the rest of the body we will give them our attention here. The muscles of the calves are very tough and dense and possess great endurance. This tissue is difficult to break... Continue Reading →
The Ritz Brothers, Charles Atlas Did it For Me (1942)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7drz_faT8sM Part of the 1942 movie 'Behind the Eight Ball', the above song is not strictly about health and fitness. Sung by the Ritz Brothers, Al, Jimmy and Harry, 'Charles Atlas did it for Me' is a funny and interesting incidence of how physical culture was viewed in wartime America. Eulogising the system of Charles... Continue Reading →
Alexander Zass, The Original Modern Samson: The Toughest Man on Earth (c. 1930s)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EG7vDgWX0G8 Much to my own shame, we have yet to discuss Alexander Zass on this website. Known as Samson for much of his stage career, the following footage, taken from Pathé, shows Zass performing some typical strongman feats from the early twentieth-century. What I love about this is that not only do we get a... Continue Reading →
Sarah Pileggi, ‘The Pleasure of Being the World’s Strongest Women’, (Sports Illustrated, 1977)
Katie Sandwina was a professional strong woman who performed in John Ringling's circuses in the early 1900s. She was celebrated for great feats of strength, such as carrying a 600-pound cannon on her back, and lesser ones, like executing the manual of arms with her 160-pound husband Max instead of a rifle. Sandwina was a... Continue Reading →
The History of the Bosu Ball
Part of the functional training fetish exhibited by members of the strength and conditioning community in the opening decade of the twenty-first century, the Bosu Ball was not too long ago, a ubiquitous piece of gym equipment. Nowadays found in the corner of the gym floor, if at all, the Bosu Ball, along with the... Continue Reading →
Stuart McRobert, Ten Years Wiser, Hardgainer Magazine, 11:1 (1999), pp. 13-16.
This issue of HARDGAINER marks the start of our eleventh year. In it we’re starting a new series in which an article from exactly ten years prior to the current issue will be reviewed and updated, to reflect what the respective author has learned over that ten-year period. Because Iwrote most of the articles in... Continue Reading →
Forgotten Exercises: The Butt Punch
Admittedly a strange name for an even stranger looking exercise, the Butt Punch came to the weightlifting community's attention in the late 1990s thanks to the late Jerry Telle. Telle, for those unaware of him, was briefly touted as one of the freshest thinking minds in the Iron Community. Bursting onto the scene with a... Continue Reading →
Dr. Mel Siff, A Short History of Strength and Conditioning (Dolfzine, 2003)
Strength training has always been synonymous with the so-called "Iron Game," a broad generic term that includes the competitive lifting of heavy objects by "strongmen/women" during the last century or so. Feats of lifting strength, however, have appeared throughout the history of most nations, but it has only been in very recent times that training... Continue Reading →
Guest Post: Here’s A Brief Look At The History of Physical Therapy
Photo Source Physical therapy, which is a unique treatment approach for healing musculoskeletal and neuromuscular conditions has a rich history that dates back to 460 BC. Used nowadays for treating conditions like hip fracture, backaches, neck pain, shoulder injuries, foot and ankle pain, and headaches etc., physical therapy is not a new treatment method as... Continue Reading →
Joe Weider, Why I Entered the Mr. Universe Contest, Your Physique, February 16: 7 (1952), 7
UP UNTIL a few minutes ago, I had not the slightest intention or expectation of writing this article. Since my return from Europe, my mail has been flooded with letters asking my why I entered the contest. "How good are the European bodybuilders compared to our boys?" asked one reader. "What were your experiences, and... Continue Reading →