Even if you've followed a strict fitness and diet program for weeks, everyone gets hit with sudden food cravings. Whether you're a victim of late-night salt urges or post-workout sugar pangs, you don't have to destroy your progress by giving in. We offer you healthier alternatives to some of your favorite guilty snacks. Remember, moderation is key, but when you need to satisfy your hunger, don't start shoveling your face with potato chips and cake—try one of these instead.The Best & Worst Foods a Man Can Eat>>>25 Ways to Lose Fat Faster>>>- See more at: http://www.mensfitness.com/nutrition/healthy-snacks-for-every-craving-ty...
Healthy Snack Alternates for Every Craving Type
Editor Obsession: Five Fall Socks
The Muscle-Building Standards: Build a Big Chest
Guys have been tossing around weights to build mass for quite some time. A lot has changed since back in Arnold's day, but a lot has also stayed the same. The Standards are bare-bones muscle-building tactics. Straight sets, moderate rest, and traditional exercises.
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25 Ways to Get Bigger >>>
THE CHEST WORKOUT:
1. Barbell bench press
3-5 sets
8-12 reps
60-90 seconds rest
2. Incline dumbbell press
3-5 sets
8-12 reps
60-90 seconds rest
3. Dumbbell flye
3-5 sets
8-12 reps
60-90 seconds rest
4. Pushups
3 sets to failure
60 seconds rest
Shot on location at FOCUS NYC
Does Pot Make You A Better Athlete?

The first tingle of THC hits him as he's stretching his calves.
“I’m locked in,” he says, squishing two headphone buds into his ears. “This is going to be a great pace.”
The sun hasn’t yet risen over Colorado’s Front Range peaks, but Cliff D. (who asked not to be named), like many working-stiff triathletes, juggles a career—he’s a full-time strength and conditioning coach—with his own training and racing, and that means plenty of predawn workouts. But unlike the other guys circling Denver’s Washington Park in the early hours, Cliff has just eaten an energy bar that contains enough marijuana to numb a small elephant. To be precise, the homemade bar was packed with about 30 milligrams of the plant’s psychoactive chemical, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). For a newbie pot smoker, the THC dose would be a knockout punch. For Cliff, that’s just breakfast.
Standing 5'6", Cliff, 39, a hardcore athlete and former Division I soccer player who trains upward of 23 hours a week, has a thick chest and lean, muscular arms and legs. A lattice of tattoos peeks from below his sleeves, and his skin is tanned an even olive brown. He regularly completes Olympic-distance triathlons—which comprise a one-mile swim, 25-mile bike, and six-mile run—in a blazing two hours and five minutes. He’s won his age group at the South Beach Triathlon, and this year he finished third in his age group at the New York City Triathlon.
This morning, Cliff jogs off to run his warmup, which consists of two easy laps around the park’s two-mile loop. Then he completes four sets of one-mile fartlek intervals, which blend fast-paced speed work with recovery-paced jogging. The efforts are designed to ready his heart, lungs, and legs for the blistering 10K run that finishes off the triathlon.
His style is distinct and disciplined: He runs out over his feet with short, quick steps, emphasizing turnover instead of stride length. Each of his sets he completes with methodical precision; each foot strike is a mirror image of the previous one. By the time he’s finished, he’s drenched in sweat and panting, but grinning from ear to ear. “That was epic,” he says, as he extends a high five. His eyes are as big as soup bowls. “I found a guy who was running a 5:50 [per mile] pace and just sat on him. We were flying.”
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Cliff is affable and even-tempered, and when you’re talking to him it’s easy to forget that his bloodstream contains a controversial chemical that’s fueled billion-dollar criminal empires, been the focus of Drug Enforcement Administration raids, and repeatedly commandeered national politics. But times appear to be changing.
Now legal as a recreational drug in Colorado and Washington State, and as a medical therapy in 21 other states, marijuana is slowly being seen as a socially accepted drug in the eyes of most Americans. According to a 2014 CNN poll, 55% of respondents believe it should be legal. Meanwhile, here in Denver, where pot shops now outnumber Starbucks, the drug’s former stigma is long dead and buried. Most Coloradans look upon pot as a weekend fun-enhancer, or a handy substitute for beer.
To Cliff, marijuana is something else entirely: It’s a genetically engineered workout supplement—a combined focusing agent for exercise and a pain reliever that numbs his post-workout aches. During a workout, he says, the THC allows him to stay focused on things like his heart rate, or stay motivated during a four-hour bike ride. “My mind is always all over the place, I can get caught up in what’s going on around me,” he says. “Weed helps me keep my mind focused, if you can imagine that.”
Crazy? You decide.
CHRONIC ISSUES
Scientists have long known that THC, the core chemical compound in marijuana responsible for the plant’s mind-altering effects, works by concentrating on the receptors of the brain linked to memory, perception of time, and the pleasure of dopamine. In the case of pot, there’s plenty of scientific evidence out there to say that’s not a good thing—for exercise, or anything else.
This year, in fact, a team of medical researchers from Harvard and Northwestern universities published a landmark study in the Journal of Neuroscience, which concluded that marijuana use among young people impacted areas of the brain that regulate everything from emotion to motivation. The study, which focused on 40 young adult students, revealed that THC physically changed the density, shape, and volume of the amygdala and nucleus accumbens areas of the brain. In other words, the research concluded that marijuana may alter the physiology of the brain in potentially harmful ways.
That finding follows decades of public ire surrounding the use of marijuana, which has been roundly derided by doctors and parents alike as something extremely harmful to your health, if not a gateway drug to crack or heroin. Over the years, marijuana has been linked to everything from severe mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia and psychosis, to other problems such as depression, suicidal thoughts, and extreme paranoia.
And that’s to say nothing of just the simple state of being stoned. A study conducted in the 1980s by Richard Schwartz, M.D., of the Vienna Pediatric Associates, reported that in a survey of 150 marijuana-smoking students, 59% forgot what the conversation was about before it ended. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, “The more difficult and unpredictable the task, the more likely marijuana will impair [mental and motor] performance.” To echo the 1936 cult classic Reefer Madness, marijuana smoking is still a “drug menace which is destroying the youth of America in alarmingly increasing numbers.”

“NOT ALL POT IS CREATED EQUAL”
But Cliff doesn’t smoke pot. And the pot he uses isn’t “regular” pot. Instead, he prefers to eat his cannabis. Or, if he’s pressed for time, he’ll inhale marijuana water vapor from a handheld vaporizer he carries. “It doesn’t burn my lungs like smoke, he says.” He also rubs his fatigued muscles with a lotion that contains cannabidiol, commonly called CBD, a pot extract believed to carry a wide range of therapeutic qualities. Daily, he consumes marijuana in many forms and multiple times.
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More important, the marijuana he uses isn’t your run-of-the mill weed, which he says leaves him “stuck on the couch” and “unable to get up.” His pot is essentially a boutique brand purchased at a medical marijuana dispensary. Cliff preaches a concept that’s become something of a cliché in the legalized marijuana culture: Not all pot is created equal. Gone are the days of smoking dry, crumbly leaves from your buddy’s backyard pot plant.
Today, countless marijuana growers genetically cross-pollinate purebred strains into hybrids and sell their pot as a high-end specialty product. Consequently, just as different grapes produce different wine flavors, sellers say, different marijuana strains produce vastly different psychoactive sensations. While one strain may leave you in a comatose state—a term known as “couchlock”—another may make you unable to stop talking. And professional pot reviewers discuss the buzzy sensations in various magazines, online forums, and blogs. As a result, today’s potheads are just as snobby as wine fanatics or craft -beer nerds. And Cliff is probably the biggest pot snob of them all.
After several years of trial and error, he’s found his daily medicine: a marijuana strain he says provides energy and focus, contains CBD, and doesn’t cloud his mind—a sativa-dominant strain called Super Lemon Haze. The Denver-based creator of Super Lemon Haze, Charles Blackton, known in the cannabis world as “The Lemon Man” for his potent strains of lemon-flavored marijuana, says this variety’s genetics come from sativa plants, believed to boost energy and alertness.
But, like most growers, Blackton also cautions that the body’s reaction to the drug varies from individual to individual. “I’ve heard a lot of similar stories: It gives them focus, it gives them mental clarity, they see pain relief,” Blackton says. “But your own body chemistry plays a role in what it does.”
Whatever the case, when Cliff’s brain echoes with Super Lemon Haze, which he makes into raw vegan fruit-and-nut bars, he says, the distractions simply melt away into the background. When cycling, he feels an amplification of his calf muscles engaging as his foot swings to the top of each pedal stroke, just before his quads and hamstrings push down on the pedal. On a run, he sinks into the beat of whatever he’s listening to—usually a mix of Lady Gaga, Linkin Park, or various house music—then adjusts his pace to the rhythm.
"It slows my thought process down so I can evaluate thigns as they come to me, one at a time," he claims. "It gives me a beat in my head that I can follow when I run." While swimming, he visualizes his hand enterting the water at a 45-degree angle, catching the liquid, then pullling back to his hip before exiting the water again in one long, fluid motion. "I understand people who don't want to race high because of the swim," he says. "But to be honest, there's nothing better than swimming as high as a kite."
Cliff argues that his Super Lemon Haze is perfect for endurance exercise, pointing out that athletes frequently rush through their workouts or pay too much attention to the pace clock or their training partners. Swimming, cycling, and running, he says, are sports that revolve around repetitive motion, and thus reward extreme focus and an impeccable, machinelike technique. Taking Super Lemon Haze, he says, dials in his brain.
Cliff’s not alone. A slew of marketers are even promoting various strains of engineered pot as an essential part of an “active lifestyle.” Popular brand Dixie Elixirs & Edibles debuted ads this year featuring kayakers, skiers, and yogis with the tagline: “What kind of Dixie are you?” In San Francisco, ski promoter Jim McAlpine launched his 420 Games—composed of running, cycling, and, yes, Frisbee—to promote healthy marijuana use while exercising.
“Some people drink a few glasses of wine a night, but if you smoke weed, you’re a lazy stoner,” McAlpine says. “There’s no better way than an athletic endeavor to show that we’re not all couch potatoes.”
Yet despite the growing enthusiasm of progressive Colorado-based growers and marketers, and a wave of anecdotal evidence from countless pot users, virtually no research has been done to showthat new, strain-specific marijuana is healthier or “fitter” than other, more mundane varieties of weed. According to Suzanne Sisley, M.D., a former professor of the University of Arizona with extensive experience working with marijuana, we’ll never know the truth about marijuana until scientists also realize that not all pot is created equal.
“Research that looks at different marijuana strains needs to be done,” she says, “because these could actually be mental performance enhancers for the general population. Strain science right now is based solely on urban legends and what patients tell us.”
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VAPING UP WHILE SHAPING UP
As we pull up to Cliff’s Denver gym, in a former garage attached to a skateboard shop, several clients are already warming up for early-morning workouts. Cliff positions the men at various stations around the gym. While ’90s rock blares, the men undergo eight active isolated stretching (AIS) maneuvers before moving on to the main set.
At one station, one of Cliff’s clients, a lawyer, pushes a metal sled back and forth across the floor. At another station, a wealth consultant tosses a heavy medicine ball up against the wall, while next to him another lawyer uses a rowing machine. The workouts are part of Cliff’s self-titled Functional Intense Training System (FITS), which blends resistance training with high-tempo cardio. “These guys want to be fit and look good, but it’s not like they’re not drinking beer or having a good life,” he says. “I want all my clients to be able to hop in a 10K race, do a sprint triathlon, ski the best powder, or hike up Mount Kilimanjaro.”
The sales pitch is hardly unique within the workout world, but the message resonates with Cliff’s clients. He’s had to cap his client list at 16. As the men finish their workouts, the next client, a founder of one of Denver’s largest marketing and design firms and an innovator in the online music world, pulls up in a black SUV.
New clients are attracted by Cliff’s emphasis on technique, and remain with him because of his energetic personality, says one of his long-standing devotees. “There’s this vitality that oozes out of Cliff,” he says. “He’ll tell you all about his life. There aren’t too many things he won’t talk with you about.”
Marijuana is one of those topics. Cliff says he discloses his own personal marijuana use before working with a new client. After that, he gauges each person’s comfort level with it. If a client is extremely amenable, he may take a vape hit in their presence. If not, he’ll leave the pot talk at home.
Cliff’s final client of the day, a food scientist at a regional chain of organic bakeries, walks in around noon nursing some muscle soreness in his shoulder. Cliff produces a slim black stick from a plastic case. He presses the stick to his mouth, inhales, and blows out a cloud of water vapor. His client also takes a hit off of the vape pen and begins stretching his legs.
“If I’m sober and I hit the pain zone during a workout, I’ll probably bail out,” the client says. “If I’m a little high, I push through.”
As the two men continue their workout, the ’90s playlist advances to one final song. The voice of Sublime’s deceased frontman Bradley Nowell wafts across the gym.
I smoke two joints in the morning
I smoke two joints at night
I smoke two joints in the afternoon
It makes me feel all right.
Without hesitation, Cliff swivels around in a chair and points up. “I love this fucking song!” he says.
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Milestone Birthdays Spark Life Changes

If you’re about to turn 29, 39, 49 or 59, then get ready for some life changes—some likened to a reawakening and others resembling that of a quarter- or mid-life crisis.
Researchers from the World Values Survey analyzed the responses of 42,000 adults from more than 100 countries who completed a survey on their values between 2010 and 2014. They found an interesting trend: people with an age ending in "9" reported thinking and questioning the meaning of life more than any other age group.
At milestone birthdays, people either conclude that their lives are meaningful, or they decide their lives lack meaning. Some engage in productive behaviors like taking up a new sport or running a marathon for the first time. In fact, researchers suggested the “9-enders” were found to be more motivated and trained harder in marathons than any other participants; people ran an average of 2.3% faster in their 9-end year than the two years before or after.
In contrast to the adaptive behavior, other 9-enders were prone to behavior that suggests a “crisis in meaning.” Researchers obtained data from an online dating site that targets people who are already in a relationship and found there were 18% more 9-ender men on the site than expected by chance. Hey, no one ever said going over the hill meant the grass would be greener.
Ask Men's Fitness: Does your birth month predict your future health? >>>
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DISHED: San Antonio Spurs' Danny Green

When you’re a bonafide sharpshooter like San Antonio Spurs guard Danny Green, you’ve got to find ways to get open, and that means one thing: you’ll have to run. And to run, you’ve got to be in shape. That’s especially true when you’re on a team aiming to win back-to-back NBA championships.
There’s no shortage of role models for the 27-year-old Green. Watching longtime veterans like Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili, and Tony Parker prepare their bodies for marathon seasons that last deep into May and June.
Green says he doesn’t stick to a strict nutrition plan. If anything, the 6-foot-7 swingman’s focus is more about keeping his weight up to handle the physical demands of a grueling season. The five-year pro shared a game-day meal with us in this edition of DISHED, a series in which top athletes tell us what’s on their plate and why.
PROTEIN: I went for a turkey burger (on a whole-grain bun with lettuce and cheese). I usually eat something like that for my protein. I do eggs on a constant basis.
FRUIT: I wouldn’t say I eat fruit all the time. If I’m in the mood for fruit, I’ll eat it. I try to get some kind of fruit throughout the day or every couple of days. I usually go for bananas to keep the cramps away.
BANANA BREAD: I don’t stay away from bread but I don’t load up on bread either. I just eat it if it’s around.
Danny’s Favorite Home-cooked Meal
I’d say if I’m home (in Long Island, New York) I want some steak or chicken or ribs. Maybe mac and cheese. Even if it’s unhealthy, I have to get some of it. I have to go to the Chinese spot or the Caribbean spot to get a beef patty with coco bread. You can’t really get that out here (in San Antonio).
Danny’s Favorite Cheat Meal
I go for the worst of the worst. I’ll get fast food. I’ll go to McDonald’s if there’s nothing else and get a quarter-pounder with cheese, a vanilla shake, and chicken nuggets.
Danny’s Go-To Meal
I like breakfast, so I’ll do that. Scrambled eggs, bacon, pancakes. If I’m snacking, I’ll go for peanut butter and jelly in between meals.
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The 6 Most Brutal CrossFit WODs

In general, CrossFit workouts can be pretty brutal. They test the limits of your strength, speed and endurance, and you’re often completing the exercises in a group setting where other guys are taking you to school. Whether you’re someone looking to try CrossFit or a veteran CrossFitter looking for a new challenge, we have the workouts that you want. They run the gamut from extremely difficult to utterly vicious and borderline insane. Regardless, all of these WOD’s (that's Workout of the Day) will challenge you as long as you’re giving them your all.
Live in NYC and want to try CrossFit for yourself? Download the Sportsetter app and enter code MFWORKOUT for a free pass to lots of local sports and fitness activities, including CrossFit. Read our review and learn how Sportsetter is changing the landscape of accessible fitness.
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1. Filthy 50
The Facts:
A CrossFit staple, the Filthy 50 is a brutal series of taxing exercises that’s likely to seem endless if you’ve never done it before. The circuit includes 50 reps of 10 different exercises, all done as quickly as possible. Do 50 box jumps with a 24-inch box, 50 jumping pullups, 50 kettlebell swings, 50 walking lunge steps, 50 knees to elbows, 50 reps of push press with 45 pounds, 50 back extensions, 50 wallballs using a 20-pound ball, 50 burpees (dropping all the way to the floor), 50 double-unders.
The Brutality:
This workout does a good job conveying the basics, and the madness, of CrossFit. This WOD gets to a lot of people at the knees to elbows stage, according to Sara Haley, star of Sweat Unlimited, a DVD series of extreme five-minute workouts. ?“[The Filthy 50] is such a challenge because you have to literally be good at everything. It’s a full-body workout that includes cardio.” The sheer number of exercises can be hard to fathom, so it’s best to just pace yourself and focus on the task at hand, not on how much more there is to do. Of course, you can also modify this and do less of each exercise if you’re new to CrossFit and don’t want to dive in headfirst—try 20 or 25 of each during your first time through the circuit.
Challenge Time:
25 minutes
2. Fran
The Facts:
Fran is a series of thrusters and pullups done as quickly as possible. This is a shorter WOD that includes three rounds, including 21 reps of each exercise in the first round. In the second and third rounds, you must complete 15 and 9 reps of each exercise respectively. You can modify this WOD to your ability—the thruster can vary in weight and you can do jumping pull-ups as well.
The Brutality:
Fran is often one of the first WOD’s that people get exposed to as they get into CrossFit. Still, that doesn’t mean it’s not tough. “The pull-ups are definitely the difficult part of this WOD,” Haley says. “I mean, it’s definitely harder for women, but I’ve seen men struggle just as much.”
Challenge Time:
5 minutes, but this really depends on the size of the weights you use.
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3. Murph
The Facts:
Murph is pretty simple but pushes your body to the limit with its relentlessness. Run one mile and then do 100 pullups, 200 pushups, 300 squats, and then run another mile. Do it as fast as you can. Pullups can be modified if need be. Higher end athletes/CrossFitters do it all with a weighted vest. The workout is named after Navy Lt. Michael Murphy, who was killed while serving in Afghanistan.
The Brutality:
None of these exercises are anything you haven’t encountered before; it’s just the sheer quantity, and the fact that you’re doing them all at once. The key is to pace yourself, especially during the first few exercises. Nathan Forster, owner/trainer of Reebok CrossFit 5th Ave in New York, says that the last mile is always the toughest part, no matter how well you’ve paced yourself. “You want to sprint to the finish but for most people, they’re pretty gassed at that point,” he says.
Challenge Time:
Go for 40 minutes or less, but up to 45 minutes is still strong.
4. The Seven
The Facts:
Exercises are done as quickly as possible in a cycle for seven rounds. Each round includes 7 handstand pushups, 7 135-pound thrusters, 7 knee to elbows, 7 245-pound deadlifts, 7 burpees, 7 kettlebell swings, and 7 pullups.
The Brutality:
No filler exercises here—every piece of this WOD brings up a new challenge, and you’ll have to be ready for more since there are seven rounds. “The thrusts are the most difficult part for me, but a lot of people can’t even do a handstand push-up, so that could be the hardest part for some people,” Forster says. There are various ways to modify handstand pushups if you haven’t mastered them and are ready to tackle the rest of this circuit.
Challenge Time:
According to Forster, a “monster” time would be 20 minutes. If you haven’t completed this WOD but are on your way, shoot for 35 to 40 minutes.
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5. The Ryan
The Facts:
The Ryan lasts five rounds, done as fast as possible. Each round includes 7 muscle-ups followed by 21 burpees. The workout is named after Missouri firefighter and CrossFit enthusiast Ryan Hummert, who was killed by sniper fire while responding to a call.
The Brutality:
On its own, mastering the muscle-up is a right of passage in CrossFit. Not many people know how to do one, so being able to perform one shows a huge commitment to CrossFit training. That said, this WOD requires you to complete a huge number of them. Haley advises to get a great coach who can do muscle-ups well if you have an interest in learning the exercise. Once you learn that, this circuit will provide yet another insane challenge.
Challenge Time:
Try to get your time under 25 minutes. Highly experienced CrossFitters can get down below 15 minutes.
How To Master the Muscle Up>>>
6. King Kong
The Facts:
As Forster puts it, “It’s a faster workout, but if you can’t lift a lot of weight, you’ve got no shot. This one’s for monsters only.” There are three rounds done as quickly as possible, all unbelievably difficult. Each round includes a progression of 1 deadlift at 455 pounds, 2 muscle-ups, 3 squat cleans at 250 pounds and then 4 handstand pushups.
The Brutality:
The numbers speak for themselves. Doing any aspect of this WOD is an accomplishment on its own. For those that get to this pinnacle of fitness, it’s often either the deadlift or the squat cleans that pose the biggest challenge. “For me, the squat cleans are the hardest part,” Forster says. “Some other guys agree with me, but the deadlift gets a lot of people too. Most people just can’t deadlift 455 pounds.”
Challenge Time:
“Five minutes is an amazing time, but if you can do this one at all, you’re a monster.
The Longest Day Ever: What We Did with the Fitbit Charge
The Longest Day Ever was an attempt to turn a typical 9-5 schedule into an all-out day of activities, all being tracked with the Fitbit Charge. The goal was to have a nice balance of physical- and-skill based challenges while being cognizant of realistic logistics.
Be the inspiration of your friends: Enter our sweeps for your chance to win one >>>
Activity 1
We turn a drive into a ride. Seven miles straightaway with cold temperatures and moderate headwind. The bike was an old-school hybrid, and I was layered well in all merino wool from a new brand, QOR. This was about that time when the season “officially” fell into deep fall.
Activity 2
A light body-weight workout to get the blood flowing again. About 50 pushups, 100 skips, two sets of 10 stepups.
Activity 3
A four-mile run up the West Side with an alert from our friends at Chelsea Piers.
Activity 4
Considering it was a big year in baseball with Jeter’s retirement, activity 4 was to get a few cuts in the cages out of respect.
Activity 5
Surprisingly somewhat scary wall climb. Hey, you never know if you'll ever need to go into survival mode. It was a nice addition to the day of experiences.
Activity 6
Another silly, but again, surprisingly tough workout: jousting. We actually made this best of three. As for our weapons, they were very light, but worthy of wielding. We’d start each round with a clean to deep squat to overhead press, then would check sticks and begin.
Activity 7
Chelsea Piers’ driving range. Absolutely beautiful. Hudson in the backdrop and adjustable nets based on conditions. The goal was to hit the back net, and as a former caddie and golfer for years, we found out it was. “250 was said to the be middle of the net." After blocking a few right, I caught a couple good. They gave me the Taylor Made R7. I remember those; these days Taylor Made just dropped their R15 and Aeroburner.
Activity 8
Just a quick jog, a little over a mile, to FOCUS for a short ab circuit. Because we fire those out like crazy on the site, and most of the questions from people are about abs, it was nice to add them the day. (You can get the full workout routine here.)
Activity 9
Hook a friend up with a dog walk.
Activity 10
Yet again, another short run to Bowlmor Lanes. Haven’t bowled in many years, except for a press event for GoPro, tossed a strike on the second try before cooling off to an assortment of gutter balls and spares. We had to give it a go.
Activity 11
How could we do an all-day event in the city with the approaching holidays and not include ice skating? Rockefeller Center it is. And hysterical it was.
Activity 12
Ever think about how hard a workout a pedicab ride could be? We didn't either. Perfect. I could barely pull it, or control it, and it’s much harder than it looks. And apparently I could have been arrested.
Activities 13 and 14
Light jog mixed with walks to Grand Central. Another iconic place, got to make a few steps count there.
Activity 15
Off to the FDR on the East Side, and, while chugging along, came up to a pullup bar. Well, muscle-ups are cool looking, why not bang a few out?
Activity 16
After ripping down the FDR stretch, things started really slowing down. Not enough water or food. Upon approaching 40 Wall Street, The Trump Building, for activity 16, it was a good time to plow a few Clif Bars and VitaCoco. (That’s not even a product plug. I’ve surfed and paddled for 12 hours at a clip, that’s the go-to fuel.)
The Longest Day Ever was meant to do what products like the Fitbit Charge do. Inspire people to push a little farther and do a little more. How do you make your steps count?
PRODUCTION TEAM:
Adam Butterfield: Producer; Nate Millado: Producer; Deanna Testa: Coordinating Producer; Liam Holland: DP; Andrew Arne: DP; Andy Zou: PA
POST-PRODUCTION:
Brian Magarian: Video Editor
STYLING:
Tops/bottoms: QOR
Shoes: Onitsuka Tiger Ultimate 81
What Makes a Top Quarterback?

What exactly makes a Manning, a Luck, a Wilson? Quarterback is the most-analyzed position in all of American sports; but for all the stats and chatter spewed by pundits and fans, the actual success rate makes you wonder if anyone really knows what they’re talking about. Forty percent of first-round QBs from the past 10 years have flopped. And only 13% of four- and five-star collegiate recruits will ever earn an NFL starting spot.
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InThe QB: The Making of Modern Quarterbacks, Bruce Feldman delves into the cutting–edge science, psychology, and often pure mysticism surrounding the position, actually embedding with some of the game’s most prominent “QB gurus,” including “QB Whisperer” George Whitfield Jr., who waves a broom in Johnny Manziel’s face to mimic defensive pressure; Tom House, a baseball-pitching scientist nicknamed “the Professor” who claimed to have “fixed” Tim Tebow by bolstering his accuracy and time-to-throw (judging by Tebow’s current gig behind a Fox Sports desk, we know how that ended); and Trent Dilfer, the mastermind behind ESPN’s QB-recruiting franchise, Elite 11.
Feldman concludes the obvious: There’s no physical archetype of the “successful” modern QB. Sure, the arm and legs are important. But what really matters happens inside the helmet. Success comes from traits that Dilfer calls “dude qualities”—things like leadership and creativity—which is why he challenges the sport’s religious reliance on rankings, stars, and hype when searching for the next Hall-of-Famer.
Because, as Feldman puts it, you don’t play quarterback. You are a quarterback.
The Muscle-Building Standards: Build a Big Back
Guys have been tossing around weights to build mass for quite some time. A lot has changed since back in Arnold's day, but a lot has also stayed the same. The Standards are bare-bones muscle-building tactics. Straight sets, moderate rest, and traditional exercises.
This week is for the back.
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THE BACK WORKOUT:
1. Pullups
3-5 sets
8-12 reps
60-90 seconds rest
2. Bentover Row
3-5 sets
8-12 reps
60-90 seconds rest
3. Dumbbell Flye
3-5 sets
8-12 reps
60-90 seconds rest
4. Single-Arm Dumbbell Row
3-5 sets
8-12 reps
60-90 seconds rest
Shot on location at FOCUS NYC
Car Dealer Anthony Panarella is built for Action

When you think of a car salesman, you probably don’t picture a guy like Anthony Panarella. You might instead imagine a middle-aged, overweight gentleman in a sports jacket with a crooked bowtie who’s prepared to tell you anything in order to take your money (and send you off his lot with a clunker). In fact, a 2013 Gallup poll found that only 9% of Americans regarded car salesman as honest and ethical—just barely ahead of politicians (8%).
But Panarella, 35, president of Nissan of New Rochelle in New York, is fighting the stereotype. “The perception of the car business is that it’s not a guy who’s in shape who sells to you,” he says. “It’s a guy who never gets up from his desk. But I want to change that perception, because dealing with a person who’s in shape makes the customer feel a lot different than dealing with a guy who’s got his shirt out of his pants and his belly hanging over his waist.”
Panarella began training with weights as a right fielder for his high school baseball team in Tottenville, a town on New York City’s Staten Island. “We had a pretty intense program with a strength coach,” he says, “and we won the city championship two years in a row. Now, with my car business, it’s a matter of, ‘How am I going to stay in shape and not get caught up in the daily rat race?’”
The answer to that question lay in good habits that had long been established since his days as a youth athlete. Unlike so many other young guys who participate in sports, Panarella never stopped being active even when he laid down his glove upon graduation. After college at St. John’s University, he entered the car business, got married, and had three children—twins (a boy and a girl) who are now seven years old and a daughter who’s now three. Panarella ran a dealership in Ozone Park, Queens, for seven years until this past August when Nissan offered him a franchise in New Rochelle. He now lives in nearby Riverside, Connecticut.
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“Staying in shape is so important for the business,” says Panarella. And in more ways than one. “There are two types of customers, the internal and external. The internal are the employees who are with me every day and the external are the customers who come in to buy a car or get it serviced. If I take care of the internal customer, it will trickle down to the external customer.”
With 53 employees under his direction, Panarella feels pressure to lead by example. “I’m not only responsible for those individuals but for their families as well. If I’m not able to come to work every day with the energy to perform and keep these guys motivated, I’m letting them down.”
And high energy is a must. Panarella “runs back and forth” between his sales and service departments all day, and even takes time to show cars personally. It’s a 12-hour grind—from 8:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.—six days a week.
Here’s how he makes it work: Panarella gets up at 5:15 and, three days per week, immediately heads to the gym. He starts with 15–20 minutes of stretching and then works on the elliptical trainer for 30–40 minutes of cardio. “Then I work three body parts,” he says—usually shoulders, biceps and triceps in one session, and legs, back, and chest another. Panarella keeps the weight light and the reps high, usually in the 15–25 range, for three to five sets.
“I’m not trying to lift what I did in my high school days,” he says. “But I want to stay in shape and look good with dress clothes on.” Body-weight training plays a big role, including dips and chinups, which Panarella says train the muscles while keeping the risk for injury low.
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After lifting (the entire workout, stretching and cardio included takes around 90 minutes), Panarella returns home for a simple breakfast of egg whites and then races to the office.
“It’s hard in this business to say, ‘At 2:00, I’m going to eat,’” says Panarella. “So ‘Eat when you can but eat right’ is my philosophy.” Lunch and afternoon snacks are usually provided by a restaurant near the dealership, where Panarella says he’s made so many special requests for meals that the owners have begun pondering adding a special health section to their menu. “I ask all the time for grilled shrimp over Romaine lettuce, or a mixed salad.” Panarella also snacks on mixed nuts and blends up protein shakes in his office kitchen.
With that said, he’ll be the first to admit that he’s not a fitness robot. He loves pizza and he’ll gladly cheat on his diet if someone is ordering out for one. And Sundays are family time, where Panarella spends as much time with his kids as possible and joins the family for pasta—although he always requests that his portion be the whole-wheat variety.
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His discipline and attention to detail have allowed Panarella to maintain 7.5% body fat at 172 pounds, and he’s still athletic enough to play ball. In fact, for the last three years, he’s played in baseball games arranged by the New York Mets organization for their sponsors. “You get to be a Met for a day,” he says, including getting to wear a uniform. Teamed with other businessmen, and a few all-stars like Daryl Strawberry and David Wright, Panarella has been able to live out a childhood dream. “Last time, I went three for four with a double. I drove in two runs. It was a nice day.”
But nowhere is fitness more valuable than in his business, where he says it’s not only made him a better manager, but has also had a positive effect on his team and their health. “Many of my employees are already on the Anthony Panarella kick as far as the chicken and salads. It builds morale and they express that to the customer who walks in. It’s that first impression that matters. When you walk in and meet a salesperson who’s healthy and positive, I think that helps tell the story of how the business is being run.”
Ask Men's Fitness: Should I Run a "Turkey Trot" Before a Big Holiday Meal?

First off, if you’re really hung up on your family binge-fest, relax: Consuming 1,200 calories is a lot better for you if you’ve just burned 600 calories and jump-started your metabolism. Having said that, there’s another, healthier way to think about the whole thing.
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“It’s all about attitude,” says Matt Fitzgerald, a fitness expert and best-selling author of 80/20 Running. “The guy who decides the turkey trot is worthwhile is likely to make similar good decisions throughout the year, like saying no to a tempting dessert, or doing a workout in the rain.” Trot on!
Video Game Review: "Far Cry 4"

On my way to capture an enemy outpost, I come across some of my Golden Path allies in a heated battle with a rampaging rhinoceros, and they have no chance. The rhino bashes into cars like they were made of paper, and soon enough, I'm the only one with two legs still standing. The rhino notices me and I open fire with my rifle. After only a few shots, I hear the click which indicates I'm out of ammo, and probably gonna die. I've still got some space between me and horned death, so I take the only weapons left in my inventory, a handful of molotov cocktails, and fling them at my nemesis. This is when I learn that the only thing scarier than a berserk rhino charging at you with all its strength is one that does so whilst on fire. Such are the types of lessons learned in Far Cry 4.
Such is an average day for Ajay Ghale in the volatile Himalayan region of Kyrat. Upon arriving to spread his mother's ashes, he is quickly drawn into the civil war between the ruthless King Min and the guerilla fighters, the Golden Path, whose leadership is sharply divided on what direction their country may eventually take. Although choices are set up and presented in a clear and dramatic way, the payoff is ultimately non-existent. It's a shame, since I was engrossed by the infighting of the Golden Path, and it was disappointing that the conclusion, while adequately shaped by player choice and action, never really shows off the consequences of said choices.
However, this is Far Cry, so at the end of the day, the story comes second to the world and the action. Serving as something of an expansion of Far Cry 3, FC4 is all about tossing the player into the world with minimal gear and direction and letting them conquer the land, one outpost, one radio tower, one sidequest, and one mission at a time. The structure, and ultimately much of the game, is virtually identical to Far Cry 3, with the same combination of melodrama and irreverence, fined tuned for maximum entertainment. The game is great at allowing the player to drop out of the story and explore the world, even within a mission. Shooting is tighter than before; playing without the crutch of auto-aim assistance is not merely feasible - it's superior. Also, shooting while driving is a blast, if rarely integrated into the mission design.
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Despite running on the same tech that powered FC3 (and even 2008's flawed but brilliantly innovative Far Cry 2), the visuals get a serious performance enhancement from the graphical power of current-gen consoles. While one can detect a little pop-in and some low-res textures here and there, the character models are very detailed and I hardly ever noticed any drop in framerate, even when blowing up everything (and everyone) in sight with my trusty one-handed grenade launcher, which I promptly anthropomorphized and made my best friend. I called her Jillian Michaels because when she spoke, everybody listened and obeyed.
If the story takes a backseat to the sandbox shooting gameplay, then multiplayer is practically an afterthought. Competitive play offers only a few stock modes and the custom map editor only supports single-player challenges (no custom multiplayer maps, even though they have long been a staple of the series). The asymmetry between the teams and emphasis on stealth means most of your deaths will happen out of nowhere, being sniped silently by somebody who noticed you out of the corner of their eye. Maybe I just suck at it, but I was done after a mere handful of matches. Co-op fares better, in which a second player can join Ajay in the open-world and participate in side-quests. It's merely supplemental, but it's fun and can lead to some wild firefights a single player would never be able to survive alone. Try storming an un-weakened fortress with a friend for a true test of teamwork.
Most of FC4 should be immediately familiar to anyone who enjoyed Far Cry 3, just improved in every respect. When the foundation is that strong, there's little tweaking required. Sure, I'd like to be able to fall more than ten feet before dying, a little more variety in the side-missions would be welcome, and I still don't care about online play, but there's enough here to keep anyone occupied for dozens of hours and still have weapons left to unlock, quests left to complete, and secrets yet to discover. Add Kyrat to your list of awesome fictional vacation spots.
Final Score: 8/10
DISHED: Memphis Grizzlies Mike Conley, Jr.

The Memphis Grizzles have been a team on the rise for years. Having qualified for the playoffs in a stacked Western Conference for four consecutive seasons, each year the squad takes another step toward NBA championship contention. Quarterbacking the squad is point guard Mike Conley, Jr., a seven-year veteran who can do everything.
Conley can shoot, pass, and defend and but is most often described as just “solid.” He’s quickly developing a reputation as the most underrated point guard in the NBA. It’s understandable only in that Conley, Jr. is playing in a golden age of NBA point guards from true points such as Chris Paul and Tony Parker to explosive score-first game dominators like Russell Westbrook, Damian Lillard, Stephen Curry, John Wall, and Kyrie Irving.
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But the super-quick, ultra-efficient Conley, Jr. can promise you 16 points and six assists a night. That's not to mention that Conley, Jr. is the guy Memphis goes to with the game on the line. And he won’t be a liability when those other big-name point guards come dribbling into town. That’s a big reason why Memphis is 12-2 and holding the best record in the league through the first month of play. Meanwhile Conley, Jr., the son of Olympic triple-jumper Mike Conley, Sr., is still searching for his first All-Star appearance.
“When you’re done playing you want to leave a legacy,” Conley, Jr. said. “I’ve finally gotten to a level where I’m in that conversation with those guys. That’s something that you dream about. If you want to be elite, one thing you have to do is win and I feel like we have a great chance with our team.”
Fresh off the Grizzles’ win over the Los Angeles Clippers, Conley, Jr. shared his post-game meal with us for this edition of DISHED, a series where athletes tell us what’s on their plate.
MEAT: Normally after a game I want to eat something that I know is filling. Steak is one of my options for protein. For me, it’s all about keeping my weight on. Because I’m more slender, I actually tend to lose weight during the season so I actually have to eat more so that I can keep the weight on.
GREENS: I’m actually not really adventurous when it comes to eating so I stick to things I like. Here, I have some green beans. I really think broccoli is my vegetable of choice. You can cook it so many different ways. But I’m usually going to have broccoli or green beans.
MAC AND CHEESE: Well, the mac and cheese was more of a celebratory type of thing. We got the win so that was a little treat. It was good, too.
Mike Conley Jr.’s Go-To Meal
I love this parmesan-crusted grilled chicken. My wife just started cooking more and that’s one thing that I know is going to be good no matter what. When I walk in and I can smell that chicken in the oven, you know something good is about to happen.
Mike Conley Jr.’s Favorite Cheat Meal
I have to go with just old-fashion chicken tenders and barbecue sauce with fries. That’s always going to be good.
Mike Conley Jr.’s Favorite Home-cooked Meal
My mom’s chili. She makes a great pot of chili. I can eat on that for a week. It’s special. I can’t even tell you what's in it. I don’t know if there’s anything special in it, but every time my mom comes into town she brings me some of that chili.
Mike Conley Jr.’s Thanksgiving Favorite
It’s probably the smoked turkey that my mom makes and the dressing. Oh, and cranberry sauce. I’m a big cranberry sauce guy. I can eat that right out of the jar.
The 22-Minute Holiday-Time Workout
It's so easy to slack off around holiday time, tight schedules and stress are the perfect excuses. Well, we've just made it harder to cut out. This 22 minute workout is fast, effective, and covers all your bases from conditioning to muscle building.
THE WORKOUT
Complete as many rounds as possible in 15-17 minutes.
1. Hang Clean x 12
2. Bench Press x 10
3. Close-grip Chin Up x 8
4. Walking Lunge with KB Pass-Through x 20
THE FINISHER
Jump Rope (100), Push ups (10), Stability Ball Lever Plank (10), Jump Rope (80), Push ups (8), Stability Ball Lever Plank (8), Jump Rope (60), Push ups (6), Stability Ball Lever Plank (6), Jump Rope (40), Push ups (4), Stability Ball Lever Plank (4), Jump Rope (20), Push ups (2), Stability Ball Lever Plank (2)