Home Fitness Celebrities and Gym Influencers Keep Getting Caught Lifting Fake Weights

Celebrities and Gym Influencers Keep Getting Caught Lifting Fake Weights

by Universalwellnesssystems

June 2021, Sylvester Stallone Posted He posted a video of the incredible feat on his Instagram. The 74-year-old actor struggled from kneeling on the gym floor to standing up, picking up a 45-pound plate with both hands and lifting it directly in front of him. On the way he got nervous, moaned and frowned. Despite the play, not everyone was convinced the stunt was real.

“You can’t do that,” Greg Doucet, a professional bodybuilder and powerlifter world record holder, said on YouTube. video So he tried to recreate the elevator. Due to the weight pulling his body forward, Doucet could barely use his 25-pound plate with handles. “You’re an idiot if you thought he could actually do this,” said Doucet. Stallone fans disagreed and posted their own theories, analyses, and reenactments.

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This wasn’t the first time the debate over fake weight had taken place.A similar controversy flares up over fitness models Gracian Barbosa 2017 Strength Influencer Brad Castleberry 2018 Online Strength & Conditioning Coach Jeff Cavalier Eight-time Mr. Olympia in 2020 Ronnie Coleman earlier this year.

The issue is so pervasive that even NFL star JJ Watt has spoken out. Shortly after Stallone’s stunt, Watt made the following post. video A figure of myself doing a back squat with five 25kg plates on each side. After five repetitions with a weight equivalent to 605 pounds, Watt removed one of the plates and threw it into the air, revealing it was actually a 2.5 kilo change plate. “Watch out for bullshit,” the caption reads.

And when it comes to bullshit, many scammers are easy to spot from the start. For example, you can easily squat down. world record weight Spots are minimal, no belts or knee wraps, no bar bending, no moaning or even deep breathing.

It’s hard to catch anything else if you don’t know what to look for. In such cases, the evidence may be how easily the athlete can play. move the barbell just before he hits the bench.Or he wrong part of elevator. Or maybe his plate doesn’t match Jim’s other but looks similar. that’s right can be like a fake plate buy on the internet.

As anyone who has used social media knows, posting even modestly impressive feats can get criticized. But if you’re an iconic actor, a popular influencer, or a self-proclaimed fitness expert, the scrutiny not just from comment trolls, but from all competing online creators will be an order of magnitude higher. Produce content using potential scandals. So why are people still using fake weights and risking being stigmatized?

Some, like Stallone, are obviously cheating for attention – he’s an actor, after all. And, as another creator pointed out, his reply Despite the hype, Stallone’s gimmick garnered four million views and nearly 19,000 comments, a great warm-up for his next post. It is an announcement of a one-night-only theater debut. Rocky IV: Rocky vs. Drago — The Ultimate Director’s Cut, a re-release of the 1985 film. (A representative for Stallone did not respond to a request for comment).

For other influencers, just squeezing the numbers out a bit can take them from pretty strong numbers to very impressive numbers. “If you have 500 pounds and you add another 100 pounds to pretend, it’s much more impressive,” he said as Doucette. pointed out in another video.

But perhaps the most compelling explanation is that it doesn’t seem to have any drawbacks. Consider the case of Brad Castleberry.he showed up easily retort The 2017 bench press record was 675 pounds. That was about 275 pounds more than when he bench-pressed at a powerlifting competition a few years ago, but Castlebury turned down multiple offers to come back and prove his numbers justified. Although he also denied the accusations, tortuous, narcissistic kind of way. But despite the strong evidence, Castleberry appears to be unaffected. Six years later, his Instagram followers are nearing his one million.

As you’ve probably heard, almost everything on social media needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Perhaps some of these followers will also be included. Considering that his last 10 posts have a surprisingly low average engagement rate of just 0.1%, at least he has one of his websites. Note Many of those followers could be bots.

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