• 034 Voluntary activation deficit: exercise selection, muscle mass, and form
    Jan 11 2026

    In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris analyse a Golden Era training plan attributed to Larry Scott and Vince Gironda, using it as a lens to explore how hypertrophy programming evolved after the introduction of anabolic drugs. From there, the conversation pivots into a deeper examination of modern debates around exercise selection, “redundant” movements, single vs multi joint training, and the current discussions around form. Chris introduces voluntary activation deficits as the unifying physiological principle.

    Key topics include:

    • Larry Scott’s Golden Era full-body routine
    • The limits of motor unit recruitment and voluntary activation deficits
    • "Redundant" exercises
    • Why more total muscle mass in an exercise reduces local recruitment
    • The form debate and how excessive technique focus can impair hypertrophy outcomes
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    1 Std. und 29 Min.
  • 033 How to write programs that satisfy client expectations AND really work
    Jan 4 2026

    In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris kick off 2026 with a Part 2 follow-up aimed at coaches. Last episode was about the mistakes lifters make when they return to the gym, this week is about the mistakes coaches make when they design and deliver programs to clients. The conversation starts with Bob Hoffman’s time-efficient “working man” full-body routine and why the plan made sense for its context, while also pointing out where it falls short. From there, the episode pivots into the two main problems coaches have to solve today: time constraints and novelty expectations, plus practical strategies that can be used to solve these problems and deliver effective sessions.

    Key topics include:
    -Bob Hoffman’s minimalist full-body routine for busy lifters
    -Simple exercise swaps that improve full-body development with limited equipment
    -The two constraints coaches must solve: novelty and time
    -How to give the illusion of novelty without compromising programming efficacy
    -Time efficiency: avoiding cardiovascular-limited sets, smarter exercise order, and exercise structuring
    -Using rest periods to add value instead of feeling like dead time
    -A better approach to 30-minute PT sessions

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    1 Std. und 6 Min.
  • 032 Common training mistakes to avoid in 2026
    Dec 28 2025

    In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris take a practical, end-of-year look at the most common mistakes people make when returning to the gym, whether they’re starting fresh in January or jumping back in after time off. Using a pre-steroid era full-body routine attributed to George Eiferman the discussion highlights what earlier bodybuilders consistently got right.

    From there, the conversation expands into current gym programming trends, including unstable exercise selection, cardio-driven exercises, excercise novelty, poor progress tracking, and misguided injury-prevention strategies.

    Key topics include:

    -George Eiferman's "favourite" 1952 full-body routine

    -Why unstable exercises reduce motor unit recruitment

    -The problem with excessive cardiovascular demand

    -Why changing exercises too often prevents meaningful hypertrophy

    -Progressive overload as a tracking tool

    -Muscle damage, repeated bout effect, and the risks of rushing back after time off

    -Why warm-up sets aren't the same as 'warming up'

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    1 Std. und 31 Min.
  • 031 How steroids and TRT increase injury risk (and how modifying your training might help)
    Dec 22 2025

    In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris break down Mike Mentzer’s “most productive” routine and use it as a turning point to discuss how training trends shifted across the Golden Era. From there, the conversation shifts to how anabolic steroid use increases tendon and ligament rupture risk and whether the rise of higher-rep training, shorter rest periods, machines, slower eccentrics, and lower frequency in the post-steroid bodybuilding era might partly reflect an unconscious attempt to manage connective tissue risk as drug use escalated.

    Key topics include:

    • Mike Mentzer’s two-way split (with rest days) and why it’s more “physiology-friendly” than most people expect
    • The tendon problem with anabolics: collagen synthesis, collagen breakdown, and possible disorganised tendon structure
    • Heavy vs light loads in enhanced lifters
    • BFR as a tool to reduce injury risk in enhanced lifters
    • Practical programming to reduce injury risk
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    1 Std. und 17 Min.
  • 030 Everyone's wrong about muscle activation + how to compare hypertrophy programs (WNS)
    Dec 14 2025

    In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris shift from the Silver Era into the early anabolic era by analysing a Golden Era training plan from Ken Waller. Using Waller’s 1975 routine as a case study, they explore how bodybuilding training changed as anabolic use became more common. The discussion then transitions into a deep dive on the Weekly Net Stimulus model and why hypertrophy must be understood at the muscle fibre level.

    Key topics include:

    • Ken Waller’s 1975 Golden Era training split and how it contrasts with Silver Era full-body plans
    • Why large volumes can appear “unrecoverable” on paper but may differ in practice
    • Voluntary activation deficits and why muscles cannot be fully activated
    • Muscle fibre–specific hypertrophy
    • The Weekly Net Stimulus model: assumptions, limits, and what it can (and can’t) tell us
    • The role of practical compromises, adherence, and time constraints in real-world programming
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    1 Std. und 36 Min.
  • 029 Elevated MPS ≠ muscle growth
    Dec 7 2025

    In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris revisit the Silver Era through one of the most iconic Silver Era bodybuilders, John Grimek, and his bulking plan. They then discuss what muscle protein synthesis (MPS) and muscle protein breakdown (MPB) really mean, dismantling the idea that “elevated MPS = muscle growth”.

    Key topics include:

    -John Grimek’s full-body gaining routine and the practical logic of Silver Era plans

    -MPS vs MPB and net protein balance

    -Why you can’t assume elevated MPS always reflects hypertrophy or protection from atrophy

    -How steroids physiologically make dieting and comp prep "easier"

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    1 Std. und 19 Min.
  • 028 How does dieting affect hypertrophy?
    Nov 30 2025

    In this episode of Hypertrophy Past & Present, Jake and Chris go back to 1945 and break down Clancy Ross’ pre-contest “definition” routine to show how Silver Era lifters tried to get lean using their gym programming. From there they pivot into dieting and how caloric restriction, stress, glycogen, and glucocorticoids actually affect muscle protein synthesis and muscle protein breakdown.

    Key topics include:

    • Clancy Ross’ 1945 full-body “reducing routine” and why even this questionable plan still beats most modern fat-loss programs
    • A muscle-physiology model of dieting: suppressed MPS and when deficits become a stressor that ramps up muscle protein breakdown
    • Why anabolics (and even TRT) largely sidestep these dieting problems
    • Practical tips for naturals: adjusting training volume, keeping frequency high, pre-workout carbs, carb mouth-rinse, post-workout protein, and subjective stress load
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    1 Std. und 28 Min.
  • 027 Are 4 reps optimal?! New study: stimulating reps vs volume load
    Nov 23 2025

    In this episode of Hypertrophy: Past & Present, Jake and Chris use a 1967 Bill Pearl program to jump from the silver era into the early steroid era, showing how training volume exploded once anabolics entered the picture. They contrast Bill Pearl’s high-volume, six-day split and contrast it with his earlier natural-era programming, before diving into a new study comparing heavy versus light loads in trained lifters and what it really means for stimulating reps, volume load, and rep range choices.

    Key topics include:

    • Bill Pearl’s 1967 high-volume, six-day split and how it differs from his natural-era routines
    • How anabolic steroids break the feedback loop and drive the shift toward extreme training volumes
    • A new heavy vs light load study in trained lifters
    • What this means for the stimulating reps model, volume load, and rep ranges for natural vs enhanced lifters
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    1 Std. und 13 Min.