Author Topic: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast  (Read 1344 times)

Natural_O

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Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« on: July 24, 2018, 03:40:46 AM »
1985 NPC Nationals winner Phil Williams is the guest this week on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast! Phil talks about his memories of training during the Golden Era of Bodybuilding at Gold's Gym in the early 1980's and at George Turner's Gym in St. Louis in the late 1970's. Phil tells how he met Mike Mentzer in 1978 and how Mike changed his training philosophy, training with Ray Mentzer and Ali Malla in the 1980's, his friendships with Samir Bannout and Gunnar Rosbo and his recollections of some of the most impressive physiques and hardest training sessions he ever witnessed during the Golden Era - http://bodybuildinglegendsshow.com/the_podcast_test/season-7-episode-4-phil-williams/

deadz

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #1 on: July 24, 2018, 09:22:47 AM »
Needs to be moved to the History Board. Why does this guy even spam this garbage here.
T

Royalty

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #2 on: July 24, 2018, 09:30:49 AM »
Needs to be moved to the History Board. Why does this guy even spam this garbage here.

And yet you decided to bump the thread

deadz

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #3 on: July 24, 2018, 09:31:57 AM »
And yet you decided to bump the thread
Goes to show how uninteresting the topics are here.
T

beakdoctor

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #4 on: July 24, 2018, 09:56:13 AM »
1985 NPC Nationals winner Phil Williams is the guest this week on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast! Phil talks about his memories of training during the Golden Era of Bodybuilding at Gold's Gym in the early 1980's and at George Turner's Gym in St. Louis in the late 1970's. Phil tells how he met Mike Mentzer in 1978 and how Mike changed his training philosophy, training with Ray Mentzer and Ali Malla in the 1980's, his friendships with Samir Bannout and Gunnar Rosbo and his recollections of some of the most impressive physiques and hardest training sessions he ever witnessed during the Golden Era - http://bodybuildinglegendsshow.com/the_podcast_test/season-7-episode-4-phil-williams/


thanks O. these interviews you do are some of the best stuff on this board anymore. Any bodybuilding board for that matter since Ironage ended.

Dokey111

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #5 on: July 24, 2018, 12:10:44 PM »
what are all those things on him  ???

Natural_O

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #6 on: July 24, 2018, 04:07:14 PM »
thanks O. these interviews you do are some of the best stuff on this board anymore. Any bodybuilding board for that matter since Ironage ended.

Thank you!

US MUSL

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #7 on: July 25, 2018, 06:36:16 PM »
This one brings back a lot of memories. I worked at George Turner's Gym in 1987-88, still friends with Cliff Koons and Jimmie Seger. Too bad George is no longer with us, would have been a great interview.


Phil returned to George's Gym around this time to train for the Chicago Pro. Too bad his differences with George cut his stay short. There was no ego with Phil, just a quiet very respectful guy. He trained super slow with long rest between sets.

Natural_O

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #8 on: July 27, 2018, 06:49:16 AM »
This one brings back a lot of memories. I worked at George Turner's Gym in 1987-88, still friends with Cliff Koons and Jimmie Seger. Too bad George is no longer with us, would have been a great interview.


Phil returned to George's Gym around this time to train for the Chicago Pro. Too bad his differences with George cut his stay short. There was no ego with Phil, just a quiet very respectful guy. He trained super slow with long rest between sets.

I met George briefly when I worked for IronMan Magazine. He seemed like a real character. We were both writing a monthly column for the magazine and, for some reason, they cut out his column. We were emailing each other and he was pretty pissed off about not working for the magazine anymore. Phil's story about George telling the guy who was posing for him to take up golf or tennis was hilarious.

Titus Pullo

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #9 on: July 27, 2018, 02:03:19 PM »
I met George briefly when I worked for IronMan Magazine. He seemed like a real character. We were both writing a monthly column for the magazine and, for some reason, they cut out his column. We were emailing each other and he was pretty pissed off about not working for the magazine anymore. Phil's story about George telling the guy who was posing for him to take up golf or tennis was hilarious.

Yeah, but he sounded like a real tool.  We hear stories about a bunch of crotchety types from that time -- Jones, Gironda, Gold, Eddie Guilanni (sp?), Michalik -- and, while I do bemoan the pussification of the modern man, most of those guys were mean-spirited assholes.  You can be a man without the whole bully routine.  If anything, the need to belittle others, especially under the guise of being "plain spoken," reeks of insecurity.  It's the bigger man that laughs at the geezers' criticism, turns his back on him and shrugs, "Yeah, whatever, jerk-off."

Natural_O

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Re: Phi Williams on the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast
« Reply #10 on: July 27, 2018, 10:42:20 PM »
Yeah, but he sounded like a real tool.  We hear stories about a bunch of crotchety types from that time -- Jones, Gironda, Gold, Eddie Guilanni (sp?), Michalik -- and, while I do bemoan the pussification of the modern man, most of those guys were mean-spirited assholes.  You can be a man without the whole bully routine.  If anything, the need to belittle others, especially under the guise of being "plain spoken," reeks of insecurity.  It's the bigger man that laughs at the geezers' criticism, turns his back on him and shrugs, "Yeah, whatever, jerk-off."

Yes, you're right. A guy like Bill Pearl came from that era as well but he was always a gentleman and respectful. I've heard so many bad stories about Gironda, he really sounded like an asshole. Joe Gold could be tough but he sounded like a good guy.