Archives for February 2012

Arnold Training Video – Frenchy Gets Physical


NPC Figure Champ, Swan Cardot aka Frenchy is training her butt off en route to the 2012 Arnold Amateur. Check out the latest video from Swann as she hits the gym and gives a glimpse of what she’ll bring to the stage.

Swann arm training video

You can follow Swann’s prep on her facebook page and via twitter. She’s A HARDBODY!



IFBB Bikini Pro Jessica Jessie – Bikini International


IFBB Bikini Pro Jessica Jessie will be heading to the 2012 Arnold Sports Festival in just a few weeks. She’ll be competing in the second annual Bikini International where she’ll look to get back in the mix of the top spots.

 

 

She’s changed up her training and is working under the direction of coach Mike Davies. When she’s not competing you can see her at the SAN Nutrition booth during the Arnold Expo. Follow her progress as she heads into Columbus via twitter at @bikiniPro. Use the hashtag #asf2012 for all your Arnold tweetage. We’ll see ya there. Good luck Jessica.

 

 



Fitness Industry’s Baddest Party


Jason Dhir presents VELOCITY on Saturday night, March 3, 2012 in Columbus, Ohio. The annual charity after-bash is always a wild and crazy time in Columbus. Check out the flyer below. We’ll be there. Will you?

VELOCITY presented by Jason Dhir
• Saturday – March 3, 2012
• The event will take place at Bluestone (formerly known as BoMA). 583 E. Broad St., Downtown Columbus.
• Doors Open at 9:30pm
• To pre-purchase tickets or for more information visit groovetickets.com or jasondhir.com
• 21 and over. Dress to impress

 

 

 



MMA Star Ronda Rousey Joins Team Gaspari


Ronda Rousey is an accomplished athlete and on the road to success in the Mixed Martial Arts world. She’s the perfect example of how combining athletic talent with a personality can lead to sponsorships and endorsement contracts. Gaspari Nutrition took notice and signed Ronda to a two-year deal. Props to Team Gaspari for supporting hardbody women and congratulations to Ronda!

We have the chance to meet her at the LA Fit Expo and she’s awesome.

 

 

MMA Rising Star and Olympic Judo Medalist Ronda Rousey Joins Team Gaspari

Gaspari Nutrition is proud to welcome Ronda Rousey to its team of elite athletes who exemplify hard work and discipline to reach their fitness and competitive goals.

Lakewood, NJ (PRWEB) February 02, 2012 – Gaspari Nutrition®, a globally distributed sport nutrition company, is proud to announce they have signed Olympic Judo medalist and Strikeforce title contender “Rowdy” Ronda Rousey to Team Gaspari. The brand continues to diversify its global brand strategy to encompass some of the best functional athletes on the planet who utilize Gaspari products as part of their nutritional plans.

“Ronda represents an elite class of athletes that have had the rare opportunity to compete at the highest levels of competition on the world stage. Rarely is there such a blend of athletic mastery, functional strength, and beauty in one package. Ronda will be a true asset to Team Gaspari and an excellent representative for all hardcore female athletes around the world,” said Vice President of Brand Strategy and Product Development, Daniel Pierce.

 

ronda rousey signs gaspari

Daniel Pierce, Ronda Rousey, Joe Volgey - photo by Ron Avidan

 

Ronda is one of three sisters and her mother Ann also had a decorated Judo career. In August 2008, Rousey competed at the Olympic Games in Beijing. She lost her quarterfinal but won the Bronze medal match. With the victory, Rousey became the first American to win an Olympic medal in women’s judo since its inception as an Olympic sport in 1992.

In the cage, Rousey has won all four of her professional fights with the longest lasting only 49 seconds. Rousey will challenge Miesha “Takedown” Tate for her Strikeforce 135lb title in the main event on March 3, 2012 in Columbus, Ohio during the Arnold Sports Festival. She will make her first appearance for Gaspari Nutrition at the Arnold Expo on Sunday following the fight on Gaspari TV. This will be a live telecast and Ronda certainly isn’t shy in front of the camera.

Look for Ronda to appear on both Gaspari TV and Gaspari’s global advertising campaign representing a new breed of Team Gaspari athletes alongside UFC Lightweight Champion Frankie Edgar and fellow rising MMA star “All American” Brian Stann. She will be actively blogging at ronda.gasparinutrition.com and making appearances with Team Gaspari around the country. Gaspari Nutrition is known for hard-hitting and clinically validated products and Ronda will now be among the fitness elite that are members of Team Gaspari.

About Gaspari Nutrition®
Gaspari Nutrition is headquartered in Lakewood, NJ and is a rapidly expanding, healthy lifestyle sports company that develops and distributes a full line of nutritional supplements. Gaspari’s propriety and award winning products address all categories of an active lifestyle including muscle building, weight loss, and general fitness through a daily nutritional supplement regimen. They are one of the few companies to sponsor independent, 3rd party research on their products to prove their efficacy. Gaspari Nutrition is sold in over 85 countries and available in over 5,000 US retail outlets that include GNC, Vitamin Shoppe, Kroger, Dick’s Sporting Goods as well as over 100 online stores, including Bodybuilding.com, Amazon and DrugStore.com. For more information, please visit http://www.GaspariNutrition.com.
See more photos of Ronda from her first appearance with Gaspari!



Sugar Fueling Obesity?


Should sugar be controlled like alcohol and tobacco? A team of scientists at the University of California, San Francisco believe that sugar is fueling global obesity and it will require more than simple education and awareness to make a change.

 

 

Sugar, they argue, is far from just “empty calories” that make people fat.  At the levels consumed by most Americans, sugar changes metabolism, raises blood pressure, critically alters the signaling of hormones and causes significant damage to the liver – the least understood of sugar’s damages. These health hazards largely mirror the effects of drinking too much alcohol, which they point out in their commentary is the distillation of sugar.

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February, 1, 2012

SOCIETAL CONTROL OF SUGAR ESSENTIAL TO EASE PUBLIC HEALTH BURDEN

Sugar should be controlled like alcohol and tobacco to protect public health, according to a team of UCSF researchers, who maintain in a new report that sugar is fueling a global obesity pandemic, contributing to 35 million deaths annually worldwide from non-communicable diseases like diabetes, heart disease and cancer.

Non-communicable diseases now pose a greater health burden worldwide than infectious diseases, according to the United Nations. In the United States, 75 percent of health care dollars are spent treating these diseases and their associated disabilities.

In the Feb. 2 issue of Nature, Robert Lustig, MD, Laura Schmidt, PhD, MSW, MPH, and Claire Brindis, DPH, colleagues at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), argue that sugar’s potential for abuse, coupled with its toxicity and pervasiveness in the Western diet make it a primary culprit of this worldwide health crisis.

This partnership of scientists trained in endocrinology, sociology and public health took a new look at the accumulating scientific evidence on sugar. Such interdisciplinary liaisons underscore the power of academic health sciences institutions like UCSF.

Sugar, they argue, is far from just “empty calories” that make people fat.  At the levels consumed by most Americans, sugar changes metabolism, raises blood pressure, critically alters the signaling of hormones and causes significant damage to the liver – the least understood of sugar’s damages. These health hazards largely mirror the effects of drinking too much alcohol, which they point out in their commentary is the distillation of sugar.

Worldwide consumption of sugar has tripled during the past 50 years and is viewed as a key cause of the obesity epidemic.  But obesity, Lustig, Schmidt and Brindis argue, may just be a marker for the damage caused by the toxic effects of too much sugar.  This would help explain why 40 percent of people with metabolic syndrome—the key metabolic changes that lead to diabetes, heart disease and cancer—are not clinically obese.

“As long as the public thinks that sugar is just ‘empty calories,’ we have no chance in solving this,” said Lustig, a professor of pediatrics, in the division of endocrinology at the UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital and director of the Weight Assessment for Teen and Child Health (WATCH) Program at UCSF.

“There are good calories and bad calories, just as there are good fats and bad fats, good amino acids and bad amino acids, good carbohydrates and bad carbohydrates,”  Lustig said. “But sugar is toxic beyond its calories.”

Limiting the consumption of sugar has challenges beyond educating people about its potential toxicity. “We recognize that there are cultural and celebratory aspects of sugar,” said Brindis, director of UCSF’s Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies. “Changing these patterns is very complicated”

According to Brindis, effective interventions can’t rely solely on individual change, but instead on environmental and community-wide solutions, similar to what has occurred with alcohol and tobacco, that increase the likelihood of success.

The authors argue for society to shift away from high sugar consumption, the public must be better informed about the emerging science on sugar.

“There is an enormous gap between what we know from science and what we practice in reality,” said Schmidt, professor of health policy at UCSF’s Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies (IHPS) and co-chair of UCSF’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute’s (CTSI) Community Engagement and Health Policy Program, which focuses on alcohol and addiction research.

“In order to move the health needle, this issue needs to be recognized as a fundamental concern at the global level,” she said.

The paper was made possible with funding from UCSF’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute, UCSF’s National Institutes of Health-funded program that helps accelerate clinical and translational research through interdisciplinary, interprofessional and transdisciplinary work.

Many of the interventions that have reduced alcohol and tobacco consumption can be models for addressing the sugar problem, such as levying special sales taxes, controlling access, and tightening licensing requirements on vending machines and snack bars that sell high sugar products in schools and workplaces.

“We’re not talking prohibition,” Schmidt said. “We’re not advocating a major imposition of the government into people’s lives. We’re talking about gentle ways to make sugar consumption slightly less convenient, thereby moving people away from the concentrated dose. What we want is to actually increase people’s choices by making foods that aren’t loaded with sugar comparatively easier and cheaper to get.”

UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care. For further information, please visit http://www.ucsf.edu/.



Disclaimer: Reader discretion advised, please consult your physician before beginning any exercise or diet program.