[quote]detazathoth wrote:
In this thread, I found out that anyone can lift an look like Dan Green with drugs and that he’s not really that impressive.
facepalm[/quote]
pictures are deceiving you cant tell how thick a person is from pictures on a computer. guys like Dan green and MODOK bench press 485 but I would not guess that from pics.[/quote]
With those first two pics on the first page, I would think Dan Green looks like he benches 400+
In this thread, I found out that anyone can lift an look like Dan Green with drugs and that he’s not really that impressive.
facepalm
That is the power of desensitization of the internet! Because we see thousands of pictures of mutant pro bodybuilders, a guy with a very muscular, but more athletic body like Green doesn’t look big to those who live on the internet.
The weird thing is that they mostly likely never saw anyone with anywhere close to that build in real life/person and probably never will.
Kinda remind me of a bunch of virgin teenagers in one of their parent’s basement arguing that Katie Perry really isn’t all that hot and that they would never “do her”…
Or a guy who never played sport yelling that Albert Pujols is a fraud who doesn’t know how to play ball while watching TV with his “buds”
[quote]nickj_777 wrote: @CT, when I switched to lower reps and more explosive movements based on your suggestions I found my muscle had a dense and harder look to it. Why does lower reps create a dense hard muscle look?
Thank you[/quote]
Lower reps stimulate a more myofribular response as opposed to high rep ‘pump training’ which is more sarcoplasmic. In essence, you’re building more muscle fibres rather than just making your muscles balloon up with body fluid, hence the more dense look
[quote]nickj_777 wrote: @CT, when I switched to lower reps and more explosive movements based on your suggestions I found my muscle had a dense and harder look to it. Why does lower reps create a dense hard muscle look?
Thank you[/quote]
Lower reps stimulate a more myofribular response as opposed to high rep ‘pump training’ which is more sarcoplasmic. In essence, you’re building more muscle fibres rather than just making your muscles balloon up with body fluid, hence the more dense look[/quote]