Planet Fitness

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  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
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    The BFD here is that this gym has caused problems for many people. What you're saying about go to another gym is all well and good for people who live in big cities, but what about people who live in small towns who have no other option for a place to work out? And no, it's not a gym.

    So if it's not a gym, what is it? I'd love to know where I have been going to work out, lose weight and get in shape.:noway:

    That's what I'd like to know! I guess I haven't been working out in a real gym the last few years! BTW, nice looking Boulevard! I have a Yamaha Roadliner. Happy and safe riding! :)

    well, why don't you write and ask their advertising executives to explain why it's not a gym, because their ads all say "we're not a gym, we're planet fitness"

    No need to write them because even a neander "thal" can understand that they are trying to differentiate their brand from the average gym and what people think about when they think "gym". It is used quite frequently in advertising "We are not (the type of product), we are (the brand name)". It is a way to brand a product.

    Why did you put "thal" in brackets? Are you arguing in favour of spelling the name of the human species (or subspecies) "neandertal" to match the pronunciation and the modern spelling of the German place they're named after? If so, then I agree with you, I just like silent letters in words and I happen to like the silent h in neanderthal.

    And while neanderthals were a great deal cleverer than people generally give them credit for, they wouldn't have understood the subtleties of TV advertising slogans, given that middle palaeolithic culture didn't include TV or advertising. I'm sure they had plenty to say about mammoth hunting though.

    And no, it didn't occur to me to take planet fitness's statement in their slogan "we're not a gym" to mean anything other than "we're not a gym" - it's preceded by someone saying "and *that's* why I don't like gyms!" - yes it's obvious that they want to market themselves as being different to other gyms....... in this case that they're different to the point of not actually being a gym at all. Their status as a non-gym isn't my personal opinion, it's what they say about themselves. I usually refer to them as a gym because I consider pretty much the entire content of their ads, including the slogan, to be ridiculous. But there's absolutely no point in planet fitness members/fans getting butthurt over people saying that planet fitness is not a gym when their own advertising insists that they're not a gym.
  • likitisplit
    likitisplit Posts: 9,420 Member
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    The "h" in neanderthal is silent? Learn something new every day!
  • LetsTryThisAgain54
    LetsTryThisAgain54 Posts: 381 Member
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    The BFD here is that this gym has caused problems for many people. What you're saying about go to another gym is all well and good for people who live in big cities, but what about people who live in small towns who have no other option for a place to work out? And no, it's not a gym.

    So if it's not a gym, what is it? I'd love to know where I have been going to work out, lose weight and get in shape.:noway:

    That's what I'd like to know! I guess I haven't been working out in a real gym the last few years! BTW, nice looking Boulevard! I have a Yamaha Roadliner. Happy and safe riding! :)

    well, why don't you write and ask their advertising executives to explain why it's not a gym, because their ads all say "we're not a gym, we're planet fitness"

    No need to write them because even a neander "thal" can understand that they are trying to differentiate their brand from the average gym and what people think about when they think "gym". It is used quite frequently in advertising "We are not (the type of product), we are (the brand name)". It is a way to brand a product.

    Why did you put "thal" in brackets? Are you arguing in favour of spelling the name of the human species (or subspecies) "neandertal" to match the pronunciation and the modern spelling of the German place they're named after? If so, then I agree with you, I just like silent letters in words and I happen to like the silent h in neanderthal.

    And while neanderthals were a great deal cleverer than people generally give them credit for, they wouldn't have understood the subtleties of TV advertising slogans, given that middle palaeolithic culture didn't include TV or advertising. I'm sure they had plenty to say about mammoth hunting though.

    And no, it didn't occur to me to take planet fitness's statement in their slogan "we're not a gym" to mean anything other than "we're not a gym" - it's preceded by someone saying "and *that's* why I don't like gyms!" - yes it's obvious that they want to market themselves as being different to other gyms....... in this case that they're different to the point of not actually being a gym at all. Their status as a non-gym isn't my personal opinion, it's what they say about themselves. I usually refer to them as a gym because I consider pretty much the entire content of their ads, including the slogan, to be ridiculous. But there's absolutely no point in planet fitness members/fans getting butthurt over people saying that planet fitness is not a gym when their own advertising insists that they're not a gym.

    You're putting way too much thought into PF! Seriously, go have a beer and relax! If you don't like PF, don't go. It's that simple!!!
  • TX_Thundercat
    TX_Thundercat Posts: 2,437 Member
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    Am I too late for pizza?
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
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    The BFD here is that this gym has caused problems for many people. What you're saying about go to another gym is all well and good for people who live in big cities, but what about people who live in small towns who have no other option for a place to work out? And no, it's not a gym.

    So if it's not a gym, what is it? I'd love to know where I have been going to work out, lose weight and get in shape.:noway:

    That's what I'd like to know! I guess I haven't been working out in a real gym the last few years! BTW, nice looking Boulevard! I have a Yamaha Roadliner. Happy and safe riding! :)

    well, why don't you write and ask their advertising executives to explain why it's not a gym, because their ads all say "we're not a gym, we're planet fitness"

    No need to write them because even a neander "thal" can understand that they are trying to differentiate their brand from the average gym and what people think about when they think "gym". It is used quite frequently in advertising "We are not (the type of product), we are (the brand name)". It is a way to brand a product.

    Why did you put "thal" in brackets? Are you arguing in favour of spelling the name of the human species (or subspecies) "neandertal" to match the pronunciation and the modern spelling of the German place they're named after? If so, then I agree with you, I just like silent letters in words and I happen to like the silent h in neanderthal.

    And while neanderthals were a great deal cleverer than people generally give them credit for, they wouldn't have understood the subtleties of TV advertising slogans, given that middle palaeolithic culture didn't include TV or advertising. I'm sure they had plenty to say about mammoth hunting though.

    And no, it didn't occur to me to take planet fitness's statement in their slogan "we're not a gym" to mean anything other than "we're not a gym" - it's preceded by someone saying "and *that's* why I don't like gyms!" - yes it's obvious that they want to market themselves as being different to other gyms....... in this case that they're different to the point of not actually being a gym at all. Their status as a non-gym isn't my personal opinion, it's what they say about themselves. I usually refer to them as a gym because I consider pretty much the entire content of their ads, including the slogan, to be ridiculous. But there's absolutely no point in planet fitness members/fans getting butthurt over people saying that planet fitness is not a gym when their own advertising insists that they're not a gym.

    You're putting way too much thought into PF! Seriously, go have a beer and relax! If you don't like PF, don't go. It's that simple!!!

    I'm putting very little thought into it... I type at 90 words per minute so can write a lot in a short time. I'm actually extremely amused by planet fitness enthusiasts who get butthurt over stuff that comes directly from PF advertising campaigns :drinker:

    I live in Bahrain, there's no planet fitness here or even in the entire geographical region that I know of, and I work out at home.... this topic is interesting to me from a 100% people-watching point of view.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
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    The "h" in neanderthal is silent? Learn something new every day!

    yep, its prounounced "neander-tal", not "neander-tholl"

    not sure about American English, but in British English it rhymes with Carl (remember us Brits don't pronounce the R in R-controlled vowels)
  • likitisplit
    likitisplit Posts: 9,420 Member
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    The "h" in neanderthal is silent? Learn something new every day!

    yep, its prounounced "neander-tal", not "neander-tholl"

    not sure about American English, but in British English it rhymes with Carl (remember us Brits don't pronounce the R in R-controlled vowels)

    Now you have me totally confused.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
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    The "h" in neanderthal is silent? Learn something new every day!

    yep, its prounounced "neander-tal", not "neander-tholl"

    not sure about American English, but in British English it rhymes with Carl (remember us Brits don't pronounce the R in R-controlled vowels)

    Now you have me totally confused.

    I'm not well versed enough in American English to say what neanderthal rhymes with. Most Americans pronounce it "neander-tholl" ..... it doesn't sound like that.... it sounds neander-tal... but it doesn't rhyme with pal, it rhymes with dhal as in the indian lentil dish. (which in British English rhymes with Carl because we don't pronounce the r sound in words like car, star, start etc... but it's that long aaaaah sound.... then a l sound....)
  • Riffraft1960
    Riffraft1960 Posts: 1,984 Member
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    The BFD here is that this gym has caused problems for many people. What you're saying about go to another gym is all well and good for people who live in big cities, but what about people who live in small towns who have no other option for a place to work out? And no, it's not a gym.

    So if it's not a gym, what is it? I'd love to know where I have been going to work out, lose weight and get in shape.:noway:

    That's what I'd like to know! I guess I haven't been working out in a real gym the last few years! BTW, nice looking Boulevard! I have a Yamaha Roadliner. Happy and safe riding! :)

    well, why don't you write and ask their advertising executives to explain why it's not a gym, because their ads all say "we're not a gym, we're planet fitness"

    No need to write them because even a neander "thal" can understand that they are trying to differentiate their brand from the average gym and what people think about when they think "gym". It is used quite frequently in advertising "We are not (the type of product), we are (the brand name)". It is a way to brand a product.

    Why did you put "thal" in brackets? Are you arguing in favour of spelling the name of the human species (or subspecies) "neandertal" to match the pronunciation and the modern spelling of the German place they're named after? If so, then I agree with you, I just like silent letters in words and I happen to like the silent h in neanderthal.

    And while neanderthals were a great deal cleverer than people generally give them credit for, they wouldn't have understood the subtleties of TV advertising slogans, given that middle palaeolithic culture didn't include TV or advertising. I'm sure they had plenty to say about mammoth hunting though.

    And no, it didn't occur to me to take planet fitness's statement in their slogan "we're not a gym" to mean anything other than "we're not a gym" - it's preceded by someone saying "and *that's* why I don't like gyms!" - yes it's obvious that they want to market themselves as being different to other gyms....... in this case that they're different to the point of not actually being a gym at all. Their status as a non-gym isn't my personal opinion, it's what they say about themselves. I usually refer to them as a gym because I consider pretty much the entire content of their ads, including the slogan, to be ridiculous. But there's absolutely no point in planet fitness members/fans getting butthurt over people saying that planet fitness is not a gym when their own advertising insists that they're not a gym.

    I was making a play on your screen name that's why the parenthesis. And yes, I was playing into the stereotypical understanding of the intellectual capacity of a Neanderthal. As to it not occurring to you, all I can say is British or Bahrain or whatever advertising you are use to viewing must not use it, because that type of differentiation is used regularly in American advertising.

    As to my "butthurt" I couldn't care less what you think or don't think about PF, I was just trying to point out what PF was trying to do figuring you should understand it. Now that I find out you don't understand that type of advertising, hopefully this explains your misconception about it. Just about anybody who knows American advertising should immediately recognize it.
  • 4aces61
    4aces61 Posts: 292 Member
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    The BFD here is that this gym has caused problems for many people. What you're saying about go to another gym is all well and good for people who live in big cities, but what about people who live in small towns who have no other option for a place to work out? And no, it's not a gym.

    So if it's not a gym, what is it? I'd love to know where I have been going to work out, lose weight and get in shape.:noway:

    That's what I'd like to know! I guess I haven't been working out in a real gym the last few years! BTW, nice looking Boulevard! I have a Yamaha Roadliner. Happy and safe riding! :)
    Thanks bro, and you too.
  • likitisplit
    likitisplit Posts: 9,420 Member
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    The "h" in neanderthal is silent? Learn something new every day!

    yep, its prounounced "neander-tal", not "neander-tholl"

    not sure about American English, but in British English it rhymes with Carl (remember us Brits don't pronounce the R in R-controlled vowels)

    Now you have me totally confused.

    I'm not well versed enough in American English to say what neanderthal rhymes with. Most Americans pronounce it "neander-tholl" ..... it doesn't sound like that.... it sounds neander-tal... but it doesn't rhyme with pal, it rhymes with dhal as in the indian lentil dish. (which in British English rhymes with Carl because we don't pronounce the r sound in words like car, star, start etc... but it's that long aaaaah sound.... then a l sound....)

    I think tholl is as close to we come to dhal.
  • neandermagnon
    neandermagnon Posts: 7,436 Member
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    The BFD here is that this gym has caused problems for many people. What you're saying about go to another gym is all well and good for people who live in big cities, but what about people who live in small towns who have no other option for a place to work out? And no, it's not a gym.

    So if it's not a gym, what is it? I'd love to know where I have been going to work out, lose weight and get in shape.:noway:

    That's what I'd like to know! I guess I haven't been working out in a real gym the last few years! BTW, nice looking Boulevard! I have a Yamaha Roadliner. Happy and safe riding! :)

    well, why don't you write and ask their advertising executives to explain why it's not a gym, because their ads all say "we're not a gym, we're planet fitness"

    No need to write them because even a neander "thal" can understand that they are trying to differentiate their brand from the average gym and what people think about when they think "gym". It is used quite frequently in advertising "We are not (the type of product), we are (the brand name)". It is a way to brand a product.

    Why did you put "thal" in brackets? Are you arguing in favour of spelling the name of the human species (or subspecies) "neandertal" to match the pronunciation and the modern spelling of the German place they're named after? If so, then I agree with you, I just like silent letters in words and I happen to like the silent h in neanderthal.

    And while neanderthals were a great deal cleverer than people generally give them credit for, they wouldn't have understood the subtleties of TV advertising slogans, given that middle palaeolithic culture didn't include TV or advertising. I'm sure they had plenty to say about mammoth hunting though.

    And no, it didn't occur to me to take planet fitness's statement in their slogan "we're not a gym" to mean anything other than "we're not a gym" - it's preceded by someone saying "and *that's* why I don't like gyms!" - yes it's obvious that they want to market themselves as being different to other gyms....... in this case that they're different to the point of not actually being a gym at all. Their status as a non-gym isn't my personal opinion, it's what they say about themselves. I usually refer to them as a gym because I consider pretty much the entire content of their ads, including the slogan, to be ridiculous. But there's absolutely no point in planet fitness members/fans getting butthurt over people saying that planet fitness is not a gym when their own advertising insists that they're not a gym.

    I was making a play on your screen name that's why the parenthesis. And yes, I was playing into the stereotypical understanding of the intellectual capacity of a Neanderthal. As to it not occurring to you, all I can say is British or Bahrain or whatever advertising you are use to viewing must not use it, because that type of differentiation is used regularly in American advertising.

    As to my "butthurt" I couldn't care less what you think or don't think about PF, I was just trying to point out what PF was trying to do figuring you should understand it. Now that I find out you don't understand that type of advertising, hopefully this explains your misconception about it. Just about anybody who knows American advertising should immediately recognize it.


    It wasn't your butthurt I was referring to.... it was butthurt in general, i.e. everyone on every planet fitness thread ever who gets butthurt over anything that comes from planet fitness advertising. Thank you for explaining that little fact about USA advertising slogans. Very interesting. But the internet is a global medium and American's (including American companies and their marketing departments) need to understand that people outside America are likely to take those kinds of slogans literally. So if they say they're not a gym, people are going to think that they don't want to be considered to be a gym.

    The stereotypes about neanderthals and their intellectual capacity are woefully inaccurate... they actually had larger brains than Homo sapiens people, and during the middle palaeolithic era, a similar level of technology. Homo sapiens people had a higher level of technology in the upper palaeolithic era, but that can't be taken as proof that Homo sapiens people were cleverer - it's possible that they were, but it's also possible that Homo sapiens people had wider social networks therefore were better as a population of sharing and accumulating knowledge, or that neanderthals didn't adopt most upper palaeolithic technologies because they had a stable way of life with the technology that they had so don't see a need for them (some very late neanderthals used some upper palaeolithic technology). Neanderthals had a complex culture, were adept toolmakers and there's evidence of symbolic behaviour and that they had a complex language. And they quite possibly invented clothes. (it's hard to say which species of human invented anything so early on, but neanderthals had specific stone tools for processing animal hides and also for punching holes in animal hides e.g. to fasten them and earlier species probably didn't need clothes as neanderthals were cold-adapted and inhabited Europe and Western Asia (e.g. Siberia) where the climate was cold, so would have needed to invent clothes) It was thought that the invented hafted stone tools, but an earlier species - Homo heidelbergensis (thought to be the common ancestor of neanderthals and Homo sapiens) - has been recently found to have done that as well, i.e. a stone spear point hafted on a spear shaft.

    Also, neandermagnon is what you get if you cross a neanderthal with a cro-magnon (palaeolithic Homo sapiens sapiens population in Europe who lived alongside neanderthals in Europe from around 40,000 years ago to 28,000 years ago, after which neanderthals disappeared, previously thought to have gone extinct but modern theories suggest that they interbred and got assimilated by Homo sapiens, i.e. neanderthal admixture hypothesis) (I invented this word neandermagnon, based on how if you cross a lion with a tiger you get a liger, etc). So my username is already 100% caveman... it's just a play on the neanderthal admixture hypothesis, because my build/body proportions are more neanderthal than Homo sapiens. I'm pretty sure my rib cage could be considered as evidence for the neanderthal admixture hypothesis. I have a vertical forehead and pointy chin though, i.e. Homo sapiens traits, hence the magnon part of my username.

    scuse the tl;dr post.... if you didn't guess I'm a sciencey nerd and this is my favourite topic in the whole of science. :drinker:
  • maillemaker
    maillemaker Posts: 1,253 Member
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    I think the people who like Planet Fitness are the people who know they will never have to worry about being kicked out of a Planet Fitness. And the people who don't like Planet Fitness are the people who worry that they would be kicked out of a Planet Fitness.
  • likitisplit
    likitisplit Posts: 9,420 Member
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    I think the people who like Planet Fitness are the people who know they will never have to worry about being kicked out of a Planet Fitness. And the people who don't like Planet Fitness are the people who worry that they would be kicked out of a Planet Fitness.

    I don't think that necessarily holds. There are some pro-PF people on here that I aspire to look like. Most of us arguing back and forth seem to be pretty average.

    I think it has to do with some interaction between your experience with PF (either in-person or through the media) and your determination to hold true to your principles/engage in interminable debates on the internet.
  • TheGreatBeyond
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    Is this the weekly Planet Fitness "Two Minutes Hate" thread?
  • ChriJMitch
    ChriJMitch Posts: 70 Member
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    Hate on PF all you want, they have the best bang vs. buck ratio I have come across. I miss my swim workouts, and definitely miss the real weight lifting area, but the extra $60 in my pocket every month is very happy it stayed there. Plus, the signup fee was only like $20 and they don't charge you if you need to transfer franchises if you move. I hate that whole stupid *kitten* "lunk alarm" thing, that really pisses me off, but honestly I stopped giving a crap. I get in, get my workout done, and get out.

    When I was at LifeTime, they wanted to charge me $140 to start (I said no and left, then they called me back the next day saying they now had a promo going and could start me for $90. Imagine that.) Sure it motivated me to not skip days because I was paying so much @ $70/month, but that is an asinine reason not to go to the gym. I workout 4 days a week at PF, so that's about $0.62 a workout. I am laughing all the way to the bank.
  • digitalbill
    digitalbill Posts: 1,410 Member
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    Ahh... the "Lunk Alarm".
    Monday I didn't work so, I went to the Planet Fitness near my house.
    There were only a few people there (11:00 AM) but, the lunk alarm kept going off.
    I finally realized that every time the Air Conditioner kicked on, it made a "klang" sound which triggered the alarm.
  • jigsawxyouth
    jigsawxyouth Posts: 308 Member
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    Hate on PF all you want, they have the best bang vs. buck ratio I have come across. I miss my swim workouts, and definitely miss the real weight lifting area, but the extra $60 in my pocket every month is very happy it stayed there. Plus, the signup fee was only like $20 and they don't charge you if you need to transfer franchises if you move. I hate that whole stupid *kitten* "lunk alarm" thing, that really pisses me off, but honestly I stopped giving a crap. I get in, get my workout done, and get out.

    When I was at LifeTime, they wanted to charge me $140 to start (I said no and left, then they called me back the next day saying they now had a promo going and could start me for $90. Imagine that.) Sure it motivated me to not skip days because I was paying so much @ $70/month, but that is an asinine reason not to go to the gym. I workout 4 days a week at PF, so that's about $0.62 a workout. I am laughing all the way to the bank.

    GASP...
    BUT THE PIZZA...
  • oregonzoo
    oregonzoo Posts: 4,251 Member
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    After 4 years I finally heard that damned lunk alarm go off for the first time yesterday.

    And I keep forgetting to go in shorty shorts and a bra top to see if anybody is "intimidated". For science, ya know.
  • SnuggleSmacks
    SnuggleSmacks Posts: 3,732 Member
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    I finally quit the PF and went back to Rush. I still find nothing at all wrong with the PF here, but I missed the power rack, pool, sauna, steam room, classes, and when I went to visit to make my decision, I found that the Rush had added a lateral elliptical which is FUN AS *kitten*!! It's 3x as much and it's across town, but it also has more enticing things to do to motivate me.