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Worst fitness plans ever!

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  • Posts: 813 Member
    yopeeps025 wrote: »
    True but was that not taught when we were all kids at some point in life?


    Yeah, but having been in that boat of being severely overweight and absolutely terrified to go into a gym, rationality tends to take a backseat. Again, in reality, it's crap. And they certainly shouldn't be promoting that as a routine for people to follow, because it's not realistic for anything other than getting people in the door.
  • Posts: 108 Member
    I used to do the C2KK

    Couch to Krispy Kreme

    It did get me in shape.

    A very round shape

    :)

    Too funny...love it
  • Posts: 45 Member
    This might have already been said, but..
    I go to Planet Fitness and it is definitely different than say Gold's. I find it very odd that they have a bucket of Tootsie Rolls on the front counter. It's annoying to have your water holder filled with candy trash. I also don't understand the free pizza or bagel mornings.

    With that being said though, I find it to be a decent gym for me. This is the first gym I've ever been a member of. I only know what Gold's looks like because I took a tour. (VERY intimidating for me) I think it's a good enough gym for beginners but I do laugh at the PF jokes.
  • Posts: 609 Member
    chismmegan wrote: »
    This might have already been said, but..
    I go to Planet Fitness and it is definitely different than say Gold's. I find it very odd that they have a bucket of Tootsie Rolls on the front counter. It's annoying to have your water holder filled with candy trash. I also don't understand the free pizza or bagel mornings.

    With that being said though, I find it to be a decent gym for me. This is the first gym I've ever been a member of. I only know what Gold's looks like because I took a tour. (VERY intimidating for me) I think it's a good enough gym for beginners but I do laugh at the PF jokes.

    I think a lot of people leave other gyms for this reason, and have had some coworkers say how they're intimidated when they walk in a gym and 90% of clients look like they don't need to be there.
  • Posts: 21 Member
    blaccoffee wrote: »
    Planet fitness has two types of customers; people that know nothing about lifting and nutrition but pretend they do and people that know about lifting and nutrition but want a cheap gym membership.

  • Posts: 727 Member
    [
    It's Planet Fitness. That's reason enough for some to complain about pretty much anything they do. Even though it's now been pointed out to the OP that what they posted in their original post wasn't a full workout plan, but instead, suggested as an addition to an existing plan. But, it's Planet Fitness!

    Again, no. There was ONE throwaway remark which suggested adding these "exercises" (if tanning and chair massage can be called such a thing) into one's regimen. That remark almost certainly came from whoever posted the graphic rather than the designer of these plans. EVERYWHERE ELSE, including within the graphics themselves, these are presented simply as plans that Planet Fitness encourages people to adopt.

    Of course, when people think that tanning and chillaxing in a massage chair are worthy additions to an exercise regimen, they are unlikely to care about such distinctions.
  • Posts: 173 Member
    I am a PF member and when I first saw your post I couldn't see the PF logo on the bottom but I knew immediately that oh this must be a planet fitness thing ...SMH...I admit it I go because its cheap I do not partake in pizza night or tanning which I can't for the life of me understand why clubs offer this ...now for a lot of my friends who are inactive this is a plan that would be better than doing nothing I have my own trainer thank god
  • Posts: 173 Member
    rhyolite_ wrote: »
    The first and last time I went to a planet fitness, people were eating their free pizza while walking on the treadmill.
    thats just plain dangerous you could slip and fall on a pepperoni lol

  • Posts: 727 Member
    This is a joke, yes?

    (We don't have planet fitness in the UK)
    This vid has an interview with one of their executives. It been posted before, but it's a pretty good introduction to their philosophy. http://milkandcookies.com/link/267592
  • Posts: 221 Member
    ceoverturf wrote: »

    61cK0%2BhYLRL._SL1252_.jpg

    Damn that cracked me up
  • Posts: 11,118 Member
    Yay, it's Saturday. Gotta go work out. Better check my fitness plan. Drive 20 minutes to Planet Fitness and sit in the massage chair for 10 minutes. My work here is done. Getting fit is easy at Planet Fitness!

    puke-barf-ralf-baby-barf-meme-generator-excuse-me-while-i-barf-3eb166_zpsmd6iequ7.jpg
  • Posts: 11,118 Member
    edack72 wrote: »
    ...now for a lot of my friends who are inactive this is a plan that would be better than doing nothing...

    I'm not so sure about that. I think it creates unrealistic expectations. People are going to think they will actually see results with this kind of workout. When they don't, they're going to get disillusioned and quit.

    This might be good for getting someone who never leaves the house out into public more often, since you get to go to PF every day of the week...I guess there's that.

    And someone who is extremely sedentary can benefit from getting themselves up and dressed, in and out of the car, also opening and closing doors, maybe a little bit of walking to and from the parking lot, sitting in the hydromassage and standing back up. I guess every little bit helps if you literally do nothing.

    I get a better workout doing the dishes and cleaning the toilet at home. And I don't have to pay to do it.
  • Posts: 7,724 Member
    jenilla1 wrote: »

    I'm not so sure about that. I think it creates unrealistic expectations. People are going to think they will actually see results with this kind of workout. When they don't, they're going to get disillusioned and quit.

    This might be good for getting someone who never leaves the house out into public more often, since you get to go to PF every day of the week...I guess there's that.

    And someone who is extremely sedentary can benefit from getting themselves up and dressed, in and out of the car, also opening and closing doors, maybe a little bit of walking to and from the parking lot, sitting in the hydromassage and standing back up. I guess every little bit helps if you literally do nothing.

    I get a better workout doing the dishes and cleaning the toilet at home. And I don't have to pay to do it.

    Wouldn't be paying a whole lot to do it at planet fitness either. And using that particular argument, a lot of people prefer not to have any gym membership at all

    I've seen people try too much and fizzle out. The typical result I've experienced from starting little, is adding more. You feel better, your endurance increases, you add more
  • Posts: 727 Member
    Five crunches in a single day is nowhere near the point at which any reasonable person -- in shape or not -- would fizzle out. Nor would a measly fifteen jumping jacks do that, and so forth. While doing too much can cause some people to fizzle out, these so-called "plans" go far beyond merely scaling back.

    As far as starting with a little bit and then adding more goes, people usually do that IF they see results. When it comes to such horribly lightweight regimens though, one can't expect to see any substantial results. The Mayo Clinic recommends "least 150 minutes a week of moderate aerobic activity or 75 minutes a week of vigorous aerobic activity" plus some strength training. These programs don't come anywhere close to that.

    http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/fitness/expert-answers/exercise/faq-20057916

    Now this is the point at which certain poster here say, "But these plans are good for some people! Maybe that's all that someone can do!" That is postulating extreme and purely hypothetical situations though, and such cases should not be used for developing guidelines for the general public. Besides, if somebody struggles to do five lousy stomach crunches, then that person needs to be under a physician's watchful care rather than relying on generic recommendations from a so-called gym.
  • Posts: 8,680 Member
    So I think I remember saying something about post surgery. This workout seems like a great idea for that. I remember after my post surgery on a torn muscle in physical therapy, my graduation task to stop going was to do 10 push ups. I think the first day I was not even able to do one on my knees. I also remember doing bicep curls with a broomstick and 5, 10 pound dumbbells.

    I find it hard to believe that for the days posted that someone is that out of shape that they would call that a workout. Planet fitness wonders why a lot of folks poke fun at that gym.
  • Posts: 17,525 Member
    If I absolutely KNEW I could get a full free pizza on Friday Nights for the cost of the gym membership- I'd totally sign up. it Costs me 14 bucks to order out now- if I got 2 pizza's a week at 19.99- it would 100% pay for itself.
  • Posts: 266 Member
    dakotababy wrote: »

    ...I just watched this in amazement for about 2 minutes straight. Now I feel sick to my stomach...like I just ate a whole pizza with some motion sickness.

    I just wanted to see the image again... anyway people stop arguing, I get all points here, my mom can't do a proper pushup,well I haven't seen any girl at my gym being able to,still,you can always try and stuff. The pizza and bagels lol,well on one hand no one forces you to eat that right? on the other one... lunk alarm and deadlift banned? I can't comprehend this, I do rumanian deadlift with 40 kgs, is that cool or not?

    All in all, it's good people could get STARTED with a cheap membership then to move towards a place with qualified trainers maybe, if I saw something like that on my gym I'd run away. I mean we had pizza once,it was a birthday one, I had none,but it wasn't like a common thing.

    My point is, I'd like to know success stories from people who attended this ahm place.
  • Posts: 5,961 Member
    dakotababy wrote: »

    ...I just watched this in amazement for about 2 minutes straight. Now I feel sick to my stomach...like I just ate a whole pizza with some motion sickness.

    Hahaha when you think about it... it's still better than sitting still while eating pizza (moment in time snapshot)...
  • Posts: 847 Member
    Wow! What a joke of a Gym. Glad we dont have any here where i live
  • Posts: 113 Member
    Some activity is better than none.

    exactly
  • Posts: 113 Member
    Wow, so according to most of you, basically everyone at planet fitness is there to eat pizza and "feel" like they're working out, without actually breaking a sweat.

    It's just an inexpensive gym, with plenty of equipment, that suits a lot of people's needs. Why the hate?
    The majority of the people I see at my PF are not even overweight! Many are in extremely good shape, and there are plenty of pretty large dudes who lift there.

    It's a great starting point for someone who is self conscious about even joining a gym. I had never joined one before, and was incredibly anxious about it. When I saw the lady at the register was my size, it made me feel much less intimidated and more at ease. What's wrong with that?

    I see so many people there every day, busting their *kitten*. Yet you all make it out to be like they're lazy.

    I agree that what was posted is not a good workout routine at all. Blame that on PF's marketing. That doesn't mean everyone who goes to this gym is a fool who would follow that garbage. Maybe they don't want to spend a fortune just to get a good workout.

    well said!
  • Posts: 113 Member
    yopeeps025 wrote: »

    That is ridiculous.

    its true
  • Posts: 258 Member
    What is PF's rationale behind banning deadlifts?
  • Posts: 3,472 Member
    LLduds wrote: »
    What is PF's rationale behind banning deadlifts?
    Planet Fitness is a judgement free zone. No lunks allowed!

    lunk_alarm.jpg

  • Posts: 3,472 Member
    Sorry for the doublepost but I couldn't resist...

    2a79e743599ad6b46ca0d479e51b1772.jpg
  • Posts: 229 Member
    yusaku02 wrote: »
    Sorry for the doublepost but I couldn't resist...

    2a79e743599ad6b46ca0d479e51b1772.jpg

    Someone explain to me what the hell is going on in that, because all I see is a cop with a broom pointing at some dude's *kitten*, fast food bags and multiple bottles of some kind of soft drink. Extreme fast-food eating?
  • Posts: 8,680 Member
    yusaku02 wrote: »
    Planet Fitness is a judgement free zone. No lunks allowed!

    lunk_alarm.jpg

    I guess you cannot wear
    $_1.JPG?set_id=880000500F
  • Posts: 26 Member
    newfutures wrote: »

    well said!

    Well said. This ends the thread.
  • Posts: 26 Member
    edited July 2015

    Well said. This ends the thread.
  • Posts: 2,451 Member
    LLduds wrote: »
    What is PF's rationale behind banning deadlifts?

    Well, all I can say is based off the tour I took and what the guy working at PF said in that time. The way he put it is: "we are a judgment free zone, so no body building or heavy weight lifting." They also don't have intense classes like zumba and yoga. Rationale? I don't know. I am glad some locations vary because it seems odd that they view zumba and yoga as intense classes since at my gym an old man takes part in Les Mills grit strength and zumba every week. They seem to follow a rationale that assumes the lifts are "intimidating" and that those who do the heavy lifts are "judgmental" based on what I've seen and some of the comments made.

    Best part of gym tour besides the slight urge to one day own a purple treadmill? Seeing other people working out.
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