Archive of ‘Exercise’ category

Body by Bethenny Yoga DVD Review

Last month, Acacia Fitness sent me a copy of Body by Bethenny at no cost. I was very excited for the chance to review this before anyone else was able to try it, but here I am over a month after the DVD was released, first writing my review!

Body by Bethenny

First, let me just say this: I love Bethenny Frankel. I just love her. I think she is hilarious, intelligent, clever, beautiful and extremely hardworking. I kind of want to be her. I even watched her topless in the worst movie ever from 1994.

That said, I found it humorous that she would put out an exercise DVD. As good of a chef she might be, as experienced in eating to be Naturally Thin (although not so much at editing), as witty a reality TV star with her one-liners — who is she to do a workout DVD?

Turns out, Bethenny got a certified personal trainer, Pilates master, and yoga instructor — Kristin McGee – to lead the DVD. You might remember Kristin from her appearance on 30 Rock! Bethenny was more of a participant in Kristin’s class. I really liked this because I’m used to see yoga instructors do all the poses perfectly, and of course I can’t do them expertly myself. Who can? It was nice to have the yoga teacher Kristin and Bethenny, the “regular person” right next to her. Sure, Bethenny was imperfect. and that is what made this better to watch than other DVDs. Sometimes we need a reminder that we aren’t awful at yoga. I know I do.

Perfect example — check out the differences between Bethenny’s and Kristin’s raised legs in Warrior III:

Body By Bethenny from Amazon.com

(Source)

That makes me feel better.

And why would someone who isn’t a fitness instructor put out a fitness DVD? Because Bethenny gets asked all the timeabout her fitness regime. People want to know what workouts Bethenny actually does herself, and so many people asked that Bethenny, a very smart business lady, saw an opportunity to answer everyone at once with a DVD.

Here is the official description:

“People keep asking me how I get in shape, and this is what I do.” –Bethenny Frankel

Unleash your best body as you work out with Bethenny Frankel, celebrated natural food chef, TV star, and New York Times bestselling author of Naturally Thin and The Skinnygirl Dish.

Bethenny keeps her slim figure with simple, realistic exercise routines like this one. Celebrity instructor Kristin McGee joins Bethenny for a 40-minute yoga program that stretches and strengthens the entire body. You’ll get toned abs, thighs, glutes, and arms while increasing flexibility and balance. Follow it up with a focused, 10-minute strength-training segment to sculpt lean muscles and increase your metabolism. Then finish off with the 5-minute Booty Blast to learn fun moves you can do anywhere for a tight, firm behind.

Bethenny champions a down-to-earth approach to exercise that fits your lifestyle. No matter your size, shape, or fitness level, this program will work for you. You are a true “skinnygirl” when you feel your healthiest, so trust yourself, enjoy yourself, and make Bethenny’s workout your own.

Equipment needed: light hand weights and a mat

Body by Bethenny was divided into three sections.

  • 40 minutes flow yoga
  • 10 minutes strength training (arm weights)
  • 5 minutes booty blast (glutes)

Yoga

I was impressed! My exact words, that I tweeted to Bethenny (and got a reply back!) were “This DVD is exactly like my favorite yoga classes.” And that really is the best way to describe it. Since January, I’ve managed to surprise myself and become a regular at yoga. I used to hate it and now I love it (but that is a story for another post). The classes I like best are the ones that keep a constant flow, are repetitive and easy to follow along, make my muscles work with challenging poses and make me feel like I got both a cardio, strength and flexibility workout afterwards. This is definitely a toning yoga workout. I especially enjoyed the side planks.

As someone who isn’t quick to catch on to dance combinations and sequences of exercise, I was excited about the repitition and how easy it was to follow along. As someone who is still new to yoga, I appreciated how this DVD is accessible to first-timers and those who are more experienced. When Kristin did more difficult poses, Bethenny would show modifications. I never graded a workout DVD before but I feel the need to grade each part of this one.

Yoga grade: A

Arms

This was a good, basic arm workout. It includes six different movements with weights, and you do two sets of each. So there are two sets of bicep curls, for example.

I’m used to very tough arm workouts from Core Fusion. I am used to very tough arm workouts via DVD from Core Fusion Body Sculpt and Pure Abs + Arms. In Core Fusion I use three pound weights and those were too light for Body by Bethenny. There are simply fewer exercises and fewer reps at a slower pace. I picked up five pounds and that is working pretty well for me here. I like this arm section as an alternative to Core Fusion for when I want a change or really, want a quick arm workout with a little lessburning. That said, the arms workout in Body by Bethenny is very good, especially if you are new to weights and want to learn some basics. If you use a heavy enough weight for your level, you will certainly build some muscle tone with this one.

And you get the added bonus of Bethenny’s quips.

Arms grade: B+

Booty Blast

This was a quick five minute section that was thrown on to the end. It doesn’t add much to the DVD, but it doesn’t hurt either. It was similar to Core Fusion gluteal work, small leg lifts, but on a much smaller scale. It was nice for Bethenny to include, perhaps some people will benefit, but overall there was not much to this section.

Booty Blast: B –

Overall, I was very impressed with Body by Bethenny! I like how Bethenny was upfront about the fact that the yoga section is what she always does, as well as the fact that she doesn’t do some of the arm workouts as much as she’d like. Also interesting is Bethenny’s comment that she doesn’t do targeted ab workouts (pre-pregnancy she had NICE abs), but instead she engages her core while doing her arm workouts. Good to know! Bethenny also explains that she usually does yoga and that is more than enough to tone her body — she just included the arms and butt sections as added bonuses. Bethenny is pretty self deprecating throughout the workout, which I love, and in my opinion, she is very real. I just like watching her. And did you know she was pregnant while filming this DVD?

This is my only “workout yoga” DVD and right now it is all I need. I’m very happy with the type, and level, of yoga, and I just like Bethenny. I’d recommend this DVD for anyone looking for a good yoga DVD with a bonus arms section.

Watch the trailer here.

Overall grade: A-

The Sound of (Running) Silence

My friend and I decided to go on a one hour run over the weekend. As I was getting ready, I picked up my iPod and said, “Are we bringing iPods?” It is always a question I ask when I run with a friend. I’ve asked this to my friend Melissa, who trains and races with me. I’ve asked Meghann when she ran a race with me. I’ve asked my adorable baby brother when he ran with me in the Floridas! I never want insult a friend by bringing an iPod when they were planning on talking and catching up; at the same time, I don’t want to be the one without an iPod when they plan on rocking out to their own music!

So I always ask.

“My iPod’s not charged.”

Oh.

A plea:

“My new iPod plays music out loud! Look! We can both listen!” as I pressed play to Guster’s Amsterdam filling up the room.

A cheap attempt. Obviously the tiny tinny iPod sound wouldn’t hold up on the street with cars and other city sounds. We both knew I was grasping at straws. I had to admit defeat. No iPods would be used during this six-ish mile run.

Why was I nervous? Sure, I could run without music. I’d done it before. On our 11 mile training run, Melissa, Ashley and I ran the first nine miles with no music before deciding to pop in our earbuds and zone out for the final two.

But we had our iPods that day. We had the option of listening at any time. There’s a certain level of comfort in knowing I have my music, even if I don’t actually use it. At least I know it is there. The only other time I didn’t even bring my iPod was when I ran with my brother in the Floridas, but I was running a little less than four miles so it was what I consider a “short” run — anything under one hour. But this weekend, we planned to run for about an hour, making this a “long” run in my book. And the idea a long run without the option of my music made me a little nervous.

No musicos
(On a “short run” race with friends — no music. See – I can still be happy!)

So we set out. For the first mile or so, I thought I might go insane. I kept thinking about how long this first mile was taking and how I would have to do about five more just like it and how would I get through it and would I have to give up? I remembered my reward at the end of the run: breakfast. And of course, how great I usually feel after a run — but would I still feel so great? I tried to focus on my breathing; in on the left foot, out on the right. And once that first mile I was done, I stopped missing my iPod. In fact, I stopped caring about it at all. The run was awesome!

I was not in pain. I was seeing new sights. I was weaving around people participating in an AIDS walk. I was talking to my friend. I was also not talking to my friend. My knee was not hurting. I was thinking a lot. I even had that Guster song Amsterdam stuck in my head, so I kind of had my own little soundtrack of one. Aaaaand now it is stuck in my head again. Great.

With all the novelty of the run — running with someone new, running in a different place, strategizing how to best dodge the AIDS walkers (and then dodging them as fast as possible!) — all helped make this one of the most non-boring runs I’ve ever even had.

Really, running with another person is always better than running alone for me just because someone else being there, going through the same thing at the same time, is entertaining in its own way. When I run with friends, the run flies by.I still like to run by myself a lot of the time and zone out to music and be on my own timetable, but in general I’ve found that my runs are much more interesting with a friend. Even if we don’t say much.

I’ve read a number of times that it is important to run without music sometimes. You can really just think without distraction, work things out, let your mind drift, listen to your own breathing, listen to your feet hit the ground, establish a rhythm and a stride that you might not have otherwise. And lots of races — especially marathons — frown upon or even straight out ban the use of headphones. In fact, my friend over at iRunnerBlog recently wrote a post about just that!

Of course, my thoughts are much more fun when I have my music since a lot of my running music is pretty ridiculous/humorous. And that is when I get the best ideas for blog posts. And when I think lots of funny thoughts that make me think I am a hilarious person, even if I might forget most of them as soon as I get home.   I also look forward to my playlists — they really motivate me!

With musicos
(But I really do love my music!)

That said, I think both sides have their strengths, though I do not agree with any decisions to ban headphones from a race. For a long race, I need all the motivation I can get. When I’m running with friends, on the other hand, that is all the motivation I need!

Do you like to run with a friend or by yourself? Do you ever ditch the iPod at home?

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