Author Topic: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92  (Read 17122 times)

pumpster

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 18890
  • If you're reading this you have too much free time
Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« on: June 12, 2007, 02:23:18 PM »
A Fitness Icon Keeps His Juices Flowing
Tuesday, June 12, 2007

I should have known that Jack LaLanne was pulling a fast one, but my heart sank when I first saw the fitness guru slumped before the television in his hotel suite.

How well I remembered him for his bulging biceps and trademark tight black T-shirt and pants. There he would be on afternoon television, urging viewers to exercise with him or hawking his Jack LaLanne juicer.
 
"If man made it, don't eat it," he used to say, decades ahead of the popular movement to eat more whole foods.

Back then, LaLanne had slicked black hair. He was energetic, vital and, well, let's say it, sexy, even to a pre-pubescent kid like me.

In town recently to pick up a lifetime achievement award from the President's Council for Physical Fitness and Sports, LaLanne still looked trim, if a little grayer, as he sat in his hotel. But he was staring vacantly at the nightly news and didn't stir as I brushed past his chair. His cheery wife, Elaine -- "he calls me LaLa," she said -- welcomed me.

"Jack!" she said loudly and started introducing us when LaLanne suddenly leapt up and lunged halfway across the room to give me a bear hug.

"Fooled you, you sexy blond bombshell!" he teased, a 92-year-old Puck.

Of course, I should have known. He was old, but he was faking the senility.

Then he planted a kiss on my cheek and, nodding toward Elaine, said, "Leave a little air between us, so that she doesn't get jealous."

We all laughed, especially his wife of more than half a century. "He does this at all our speeches," she explained. "He shuffles out on stage and then he surprises people."

Decades ahead of today's obesity epidemic -- and while Richard Simmons and Jane Fonda were still in diapers -- LaLanne took his exercise crusade to the airwaves, demonstrating to Americans just becoming enamored with television how they could stay active while they viewed their favorite programs.

Would that a few more had paid attention.

LaLanne used to regale his audience with his one-armed push-ups done on fingertips. He showed them how to turn their recliners into mini-gyms by pumping imaginary bicycles and doing other chair exercises. In the 1930s, he even began advocating weight training. To go beyond the usual barbells -- and to keep his gym clients from getting bored --he worked with a blacksmith to develop leg-extension equipment and one of the first adjustable weight machines that are standard equipment in today's gyms.

A chiropractor by training, LaLanne learned about vegetarianism from his mother, a strict Seventh-day Adventist. So while the country dined on meat and potatoes, LaLanne crusaded for eating raw fruit and vegetables and avoiding processed fare.
 
"Did you ever read the label on a can of soup?" he asks, still exasperated. "You can't pronounce the ingredients. Artificial coloring, additives. Added color. Salt. Sugar."

To baby boomers and their parents, the name Jack LaLanne is synonymous with health, vitality and fitness. But this famous muscle man, who now serves on California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's Council on Physical Fitness, says he started life "as a weak, sick, miserable kid," addicted to sugar. He dropped out of a San Francisco Bay area high school and was a self-described troublemaker who wandered into a health lecture one day and changed his life.

The speaker advocated eating healthful food -- a tenet that resonated with LaLanne. "I was this young 15-year-old," LaLanne recalls. "What the hell! . . . I wanted to be an athlete. I wanted the girls to like me. I wanted to go through the day without headaches."

That night, he prayed for guidance to help him kick the candy, meat and other foods that he thought were killing him. The next day, he began life as a vegetarian -- a practice that he mostly continues today -- and joined the Berkeley YMCA. "I started working out with weights, and it changed my life," he says. "If something changes your life, you will be enthusiastic about it."

So enthusiastic, that LaLanne is considered one of the first modern health evangelists. "Billy Graham is for the hereafter," LaLanne likes to say. "I'm for the here and now."

He still lifts weights -- a practice that numerous studies show preserves the muscle mass usually lost with aging. Video:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/video/2007/05/18/VI2007051800916.html

"I've said it a million times," he notes. "Exercise is king. Nutrition is queen. Put them together and you've got a kingdom."

It's that combination of activity and nutrition that science shows can control blood pressure, improve heart health, tone muscles, elevate mood, maintain mental functioning, slow aging and stave off premature death.

To celebrate his 65th birthday, he swam pulling 65 boats filled with 6,500 pounds of wood pulp in Lake Ashi, near Tokyo. For his 70th birthday, he towed 70 boats with 70 people 1.5 miles against the current in the Long Beach, Calif. harbor. For his 95th birthday, he'd like to swim from the coast of California to Santa Catalina Island, more than 20 miles offshore. But Elaine says, somewhat in jest, that she'll divorce him if he tries.

Unlike many of their contemporaries, who are in assisted-living or nursing homes, LaLanne still works and lives independently in a home on the central coast of California. He's still such an avid swimmer in his 10th decade that he recently signed on to promote a small resistance swimming pool that is the aquatic equivalent of a home treadmill. In his spare time, he drives his 2005 Corvette around town. "Would I put water in the gas tank?" he asks, not missing an opportunity to proselytize. "Well, what about your body? That's why a lot of people go through life pooping out and die in middle age. You have got to put the right fuel in this machine."

Portion control is another message that he delivered long before fast-food restaurants began super-sizing meals. "People are exceeding the feed limit," LaLanne likes to say. "It's that simple. The food you eat today is walking and talking tomorrow."

LaLanne may have slowed a little from his heyday, but he hasn't given up practicing what he preaches. He rises at 6 or 7 a.m. and heads to one of two gyms at his home for a two-hour workout. (Elaine takes a more laid-back approach. "He rolls out of bed and I roll over," she quips, preferring to work out in the pool later in the day.)

He eats two meals a day, but notes that this regimen isn't for everyone. "You've got to figure out what works for your schedule," he says. "You know who is the most important person on this earth? It's me. And the most important person on this earth is you."

His breakfast is at 11 a.m. He eats four to five pieces of fruit and gets protein from cooked egg whites. "Once in a while I eat a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with avocado and tomato," he says.

He doesn't snack between meals and uses soy milk instead of dairy products, but he isn't a Spartan: He and Elaine eat out every night.

"Every restaurant near us now has a Jack LaLanne salad," he says. "It's at least 10 raw vegetables chopped, and very little lettuce." He brings his own sesame oil salad dressing and sometimes adds more hard-boiled egg whites for additional protein. He also eats fish, especially salmon, which is rich in healthy omega-3 fatty acids.

And, of course, there's a little wine, a tribute to his Franco-American heritage. "Ever see a Frenchman who doesn't drink?" he asks. He sips a glass that's a mix of white zinfandel and red wine -- because, as he says, "one's too sweet and one's too sour."

Moderation remains his mantra. His healthy habits -- and a few good genes -- account for his longevity. His mother lived to be 94, though his father died at 50. What he stumbled upon as a teenager and built as an adult have not only helped him to age well but have also stood the test of time -- and science.

He is unsentimental about the past. "The good old days," LaLanne says. "Poop. The good old days are now, now, now. What I think about is now. This is the moment I have waited for. This is it. These are the good old days.

Pics:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/gallery/070608/GAL-07Jun08-77378/index.html

climber

  • Getbig III
  • ***
  • Posts: 501
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #1 on: June 12, 2007, 02:37:31 PM »
This guy is the man.
Hrmmm

shiftedShapes

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 3828
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #2 on: June 12, 2007, 02:43:20 PM »
how does he manage to maintain his muscle without 150g of protein a day?

must be a miracle

Van_Bilderass

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 16653
  • "Don't Try"
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #3 on: June 12, 2007, 03:00:02 PM »
how does he manage to maintain his muscle without 150g of protein a day?

must be a miracle
He sneaks in some whey shakes and takes NO2 before every workout.

shiftedShapes

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 3828
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #4 on: June 12, 2007, 03:01:51 PM »
He sneaks in some whey shakes and takes NO2 before every workout.

so he just fakes being natural HES ACTUALLY ON THE MUSCLETECH STACK

knny187

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 22005
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #5 on: June 12, 2007, 03:54:44 PM »
I ran into a guy that met him....

said he was incredible...but his hair piece was disturbing












Come & Check out Getbig's Pet Board
News, Nutrition/Healthcare, & Gossip
A place to talk about pets & animals


http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?board=59.0

suckmymuscle

  • Guest
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #6 on: June 12, 2007, 04:01:45 PM »
  He looks great for 92, but he still looks like shit regardless. Everyone looks like shit at 92, no exceptions.That is the common denominator for Human Beings: no matter how strong, smart and good-looking you were, you end up weak, demented and ugly. And then you die.

SUCKMYMUSCLE

pumpster

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 18890
  • If you're reading this you have too much free time
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #7 on: June 12, 2007, 04:10:23 PM »
  He looks great for 92, but he still looks like shit regardless. Everyone looks like shit at 92, no exceptions.That is the common denominator for Human Beings: no matter how strong, smart and good-looking you were, you end up weak, demented and ugly. And then you die.

SUCKMYMUSCLE

Great piece of negativity; why don't you die now?


Hope this helps

The Coach

  • Guest
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #8 on: June 12, 2007, 04:15:36 PM »
A Fitness Icon Keeps His Juices Flowing
Tuesday, June 12, 2007

I should have known that Jack LaLanne was pulling a fast one, but my heart sank when I first saw the fitness guru slumped before the television in his hotel suite.

How well I remembered him for his bulging biceps and trademark tight black T-shirt and pants. There he would be on afternoon television, urging viewers to exercise with him or hawking his Jack LaLanne juicer.
 
"If man made it, don't eat it," he used to say, decades ahead of the popular movement to eat more whole foods.

Back then, LaLanne had slicked black hair. He was energetic, vital and, well, let's say it, sexy, even to a pre-pubescent kid like me.

In town recently to pick up a lifetime achievement award from the President's Council for Physical Fitness and Sports, LaLanne still looked trim, if a little grayer, as he sat in his hotel. But he was staring vacantly at the nightly news and didn't stir as I brushed past his chair. His cheery wife, Elaine -- "he calls me LaLa," she said -- welcomed me.

"Jack!" she said loudly and started introducing us when LaLanne suddenly leapt up and lunged halfway across the room to give me a bear hug.

"Fooled you, you sexy blond bombshell!" he teased, a 92-year-old Puck.

Of course, I should have known. He was old, but he was faking the senility.

Then he planted a kiss on my cheek and, nodding toward Elaine, said, "Leave a little air between us, so that she doesn't get jealous."

We all laughed, especially his wife of more than half a century. "He does this at all our speeches," she explained. "He shuffles out on stage and then he surprises people."

Decades ahead of today's obesity epidemic -- and while Richard Simmons and Jane Fonda were still in diapers -- LaLanne took his exercise crusade to the airwaves, demonstrating to Americans just becoming enamored with television how they could stay active while they viewed their favorite programs.

Would that a few more had paid attention.

LaLanne used to regale his audience with his one-armed push-ups done on fingertips. He showed them how to turn their recliners into mini-gyms by pumping imaginary bicycles and doing other chair exercises. In the 1930s, he even began advocating weight training. To go beyond the usual barbells -- and to keep his gym clients from getting bored --he worked with a blacksmith to develop leg-extension equipment and one of the first adjustable weight machines that are standard equipment in today's gyms.

A chiropractor by training, LaLanne learned about vegetarianism from his mother, a strict Seventh-day Adventist. So while the country dined on meat and potatoes, LaLanne crusaded for eating raw fruit and vegetables and avoiding processed fare.
 
"Did you ever read the label on a can of soup?" he asks, still exasperated. "You can't pronounce the ingredients. Artificial coloring, additives. Added color. Salt. Sugar."

To baby boomers and their parents, the name Jack LaLanne is synonymous with health, vitality and fitness. But this famous muscle man, who now serves on California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's Council on Physical Fitness, says he started life "as a weak, sick, miserable kid," addicted to sugar. He dropped out of a San Francisco Bay area high school and was a self-described troublemaker who wandered into a health lecture one day and changed his life.

The speaker advocated eating healthful food -- a tenet that resonated with LaLanne. "I was this young 15-year-old," LaLanne recalls. "What the hell! . . . I wanted to be an athlete. I wanted the girls to like me. I wanted to go through the day without headaches."

That night, he prayed for guidance to help him kick the candy, meat and other foods that he thought were killing him. The next day, he began life as a vegetarian -- a practice that he mostly continues today -- and joined the Berkeley YMCA. "I started working out with weights, and it changed my life," he says. "If something changes your life, you will be enthusiastic about it."

So enthusiastic, that LaLanne is considered one of the first modern health evangelists. "Billy Graham is for the hereafter," LaLanne likes to say. "I'm for the here and now."

He still lifts weights -- a practice that numerous studies show preserves the muscle mass usually lost with aging. Video:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/video/2007/05/18/VI2007051800916.html

"I've said it a million times," he notes. "Exercise is king. Nutrition is queen. Put them together and you've got a kingdom."

It's that combination of activity and nutrition that science shows can control blood pressure, improve heart health, tone muscles, elevate mood, maintain mental functioning, slow aging and stave off premature death.

To celebrate his 65th birthday, he swam pulling 65 boats filled with 6,500 pounds of wood pulp in Lake Ashi, near Tokyo. For his 70th birthday, he towed 70 boats with 70 people 1.5 miles against the current in the Long Beach, Calif. harbor. For his 95th birthday, he'd like to swim from the coast of California to Santa Catalina Island, more than 20 miles offshore. But Elaine says, somewhat in jest, that she'll divorce him if he tries.

Unlike many of their contemporaries, who are in assisted-living or nursing homes, LaLanne still works and lives independently in a home on the central coast of California. He's still such an avid swimmer in his 10th decade that he recently signed on to promote a small resistance swimming pool that is the aquatic equivalent of a home treadmill. In his spare time, he drives his 2005 Corvette around town. "Would I put water in the gas tank?" he asks, not missing an opportunity to proselytize. "Well, what about your body? That's why a lot of people go through life pooping out and die in middle age. You have got to put the right fuel in this machine."

Portion control is another message that he delivered long before fast-food restaurants began super-sizing meals. "People are exceeding the feed limit," LaLanne likes to say. "It's that simple. The food you eat today is walking and talking tomorrow."

LaLanne may have slowed a little from his heyday, but he hasn't given up practicing what he preaches. He rises at 6 or 7 a.m. and heads to one of two gyms at his home for a two-hour workout. (Elaine takes a more laid-back approach. "He rolls out of bed and I roll over," she quips, preferring to work out in the pool later in the day.)

He eats two meals a day, but notes that this regimen isn't for everyone. "You've got to figure out what works for your schedule," he says. "You know who is the most important person on this earth? It's me. And the most important person on this earth is you."

His breakfast is at 11 a.m. He eats four to five pieces of fruit and gets protein from cooked egg whites. "Once in a while I eat a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with avocado and tomato," he says.

He doesn't snack between meals and uses soy milk instead of dairy products, but he isn't a Spartan: He and Elaine eat out every night.

"Every restaurant near us now has a Jack LaLanne salad," he says. "It's at least 10 raw vegetables chopped, and very little lettuce." He brings his own sesame oil salad dressing and sometimes adds more hard-boiled egg whites for additional protein. He also eats fish, especially salmon, which is rich in healthy omega-3 fatty acids.

And, of course, there's a little wine, a tribute to his Franco-American heritage. "Ever see a Frenchman who doesn't drink?" he asks. He sips a glass that's a mix of white zinfandel and red wine -- because, as he says, "one's too sweet and one's too sour."

Moderation remains his mantra. His healthy habits -- and a few good genes -- account for his longevity. His mother lived to be 94, though his father died at 50. What he stumbled upon as a teenager and built as an adult have not only helped him to age well but have also stood the test of time -- and science.

He is unsentimental about the past. "The good old days," LaLanne says. "Poop. The good old days are now, now, now. What I think about is now. This is the moment I have waited for. This is it. These are the good old days.

Pics:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/gallery/070608/GAL-07Jun08-77378/index.html


Great, great story!

suckmymuscle

  • Guest
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #9 on: June 12, 2007, 04:21:45 PM »
Great piece of negativity; why don't you die now?


Hope this helps

  I can't die now because I have a 5 year old son to raise and a mother with leukemia. Besides, I have other relatives who would suffer greatly, or at least more than I would, if I committed suicide. So it would be selfish for me to blow my brains out. Hope this helps.

SUCKMYMUSCLE

Stark

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 22988
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #10 on: June 12, 2007, 04:35:37 PM »
Is he planing a comeback?

UPINTHEMGUTS

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 5633
  • I can spot crazy pussy....
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #11 on: June 12, 2007, 04:42:11 PM »
  I can't die now because I have a 5 year old son to raise and a mother with leukemia. Besides, I have other relatives who would suffer greatly, or at least more than I would, if I committed suicide. So it would be selfish for me to blow my brains out. Hope this helps.

SUCKMYMUSCLE

oh....no wonder you're bitter. Maybe a heart attack will do you in in your early 40's and you'll get lucky.

JOHN MATRIX

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 13281
  • the Media is the Problem
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #12 on: June 12, 2007, 04:49:56 PM »
  He looks great for 92, but he still looks like shit regardless. Everyone looks like shit at 92, no exceptions.That is the common denominator for Human Beings: no matter how strong, smart and good-looking you were, you end up weak, demented and ugly. And then you die.

SUCKMYMUSCLE
LMFAOOOOO!!!!

OneManGang

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 1628
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #13 on: June 12, 2007, 07:02:43 PM »
WIG ALERT! WIG ALERT! WIG ALERT! WIG ALERT! WIG ALERT! WIG ALERT!

jude2

  • Competitors II
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 11638
  • Getbig!
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #14 on: June 12, 2007, 07:45:29 PM »
I don't know if that is a wig or a comb over, but who gives a fuck at that age.

onlyme

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 19327
  • Don't Fuck With Bears
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #15 on: June 12, 2007, 08:36:40 PM »
I met Jack for the first time at the Club Industry show in Chicago in 1993.  I didn't realize how short he was.  Ferrigno was with him and I think it was Lou's B.D. or something.

phyxsius

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 6264
  • Mini Getbigger
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #16 on: June 12, 2007, 08:42:42 PM »
With that age and body, he still can beat Tamali hands down
I am a mini beast

chaos

  • Moderator
  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 59389
  • Ron "There is no freedom of speech here" Avidan
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #17 on: June 12, 2007, 08:45:36 PM »
Jack pwns everyone
Liar!!!!Filt!!!!

PORKY

  • Getbig III
  • ***
  • Posts: 725
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #18 on: June 13, 2007, 12:36:57 AM »
Jack must be in cahoots with Sly Stallone hehehee  ;D...all things considered Jack is a legend! Dont know if any younger fellas out there can actually do what he's doing at his age even.
P

LatsMcGee

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 7464
  • Getbig!
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #19 on: June 13, 2007, 02:58:22 AM »
He needs to trade in those homo soy shakes and start drinking blood again like he did in the old days.  Soy?  Jesus Christ Jack.

Bluto

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 33175
  • Well?
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #20 on: June 13, 2007, 03:03:03 AM »
all drugs
Z

bmacsys

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 6074
  • Getbig!
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #21 on: June 13, 2007, 04:45:10 AM »
  He looks great for 92, but he still looks like shit regardless. Everyone looks like shit at 92, no exceptions.That is the common denominator for Human Beings: no matter how strong, smart and good-looking you were, you end up weak, demented and ugly. And then you die.

SUCKMYMUSCLE

What is your excuse for being weak, demented and ugly at your age? Not to mention you are obviously miserable all the time.
The House that Ruth built

BroadStreetBruiser

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 8575
  • TKU
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #22 on: June 13, 2007, 06:01:56 AM »
Great piece of negativity; why don't you die now?


Hope this helps

He will. That's HIS point dummy

pumpster

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 18890
  • If you're reading this you have too much free time
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #23 on: June 13, 2007, 06:21:43 AM »
He will. That's HIS point dummy

Epic nonsensical babbling.

BayGBM

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 19660
Re: Jack LaLanne still bombing at 92
« Reply #24 on: June 13, 2007, 08:41:25 AM »
Jack can do this... can you?  :D