Did You Fall For The Rack Workout Station Infomercial Like I Did?
People try to sell you things all the time
People try to sell you things all the time. When you open a magazine, you run into ads promising you healthier looking skin, when you drive you'll see billboards displaying the juiciest, fattest sandwiches you've ever seen with a happy person holding it. And, when you turn on the TV, you'll run into infomercials like I did when I first discovered The Rack Workout Station.
The infomercial shows a ripped guy having what looks like an insane workout from this seemingly simple exercise device. It also shocks you with the versatility, the number of exercises you can do, and tops it all off with a celebrity endorsement by Owen McKibbin, a fitness model who was on the cover of Men's Health Magazine nineteen times.
If you are like many, you've bought your fair share of over-hyped garbage over the years, and I honestly can't say that I haven't fallen for a sales pitch or two (or three or four). I'm easily sold and excitable, but as my wallet drains, I'm learning the hard way that most stuff isn't what it seems. Any kind of advertisement you run into is trying to get you to do one thing, buy. And they try to get you to buy their product via all sorts of crazy and effective sales tactics that seem to render their targets (you and me) helpless to their one time offers and "free" bonuses.
Well, what about The Rack? Is everything as it seems? Not entirely. You see, when someone creates an advertisement for a weight loss pill, or a new exercise machine, they usually hire fitness models who have been exercising for years, and have just finished "cutting" weight so they could show up on photo-shoot day with a low body fat percentage. No, the picture of the ripped guy next to the fitness product or diet pill you are looking at probably didn't get that body via the product. It's their job to look the way they do.
Now, I don't want to kill your hopes and dreams of getting ripped or fitness-model fit. You don't need awesome genetics to get ripped and fit. You just need to stick to a complete exercise program and maintain a healthy diet. With that said, does The Rack Workout Station work in the pursuit of excellent fitness? Yes. Is the infomercial selling you garbage? No.
The Rack Workout Station works because if follows the rules of fitness. It challenges your muscles with a variety of exercises. It provides resistance via your body's weight or the weight of The Rack itself. It will challenge your muscles, and it will cause you to burn calories. Keep in mind though, that exercise alone doesn't cause weight loss. What directly causes weight loss is the deficit that occurs when you consume less calories than you use. A nutrition guide is included with The Rack to help you get your diet under control. By following these two simple rules of fitness, a healthy diet, and regular exercise that challenges you, you can achieve a ripped, lean body.
by: Jim Conrad
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