ERIC KIM FITNESS
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Just don’t be a lemming!
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“Deadlifts are for lemmings—full-ROM masochists marching off the spinal-shear cliff in perfect algorithmic formation.”
There’s like literally almost no downsides to doing a rack pull.
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Eric Kim refuses supplements for the same reason he walks barefoot, lifts belt‑less, and publishes unedited blog posts: he believes shortcuts dull the edge. In his words, “protein powder, creatine, and supplements are all a scam—just eat more meat, lift, and let your own biology manufacture what it needs.” The stance blends first‑principles minimalism (“remove the unnecessary, amplify the essential”), distrust of a lightly regulated industry, and the conviction that a carnivore‑fasted diet already supplies every molecule his physiology requires. Below is the deep dive—direct quotes, the science that backs (and sometimes challenges) his view, and how he covers nutrient bases without a single capsule.
June 13, 2025
I’m not guessing or relying on hearsay—I’ve read and watched Eric Kim’s own material.
June 13, 2025
Eric Kim’s “break‑all‑the‑rules” playbook is more than a quirky personal brand—it’s a live‑action case study that reveals where digital attention, SEO, and creator economics are really headed. By carpet‑bombing every channel with free, controversy‑tinted, lightning‑fast content—and stripping away ads, paywalls, and even visual polish—Kim lands #1 for “street photography,” converts 4‑figure workshop seats, and smuggles his name into Wikipedia’s long‑tail knowledge graph. Each stunt spotlights a bigger shift that affects every marketer, founder, or artist who relies on being discovered online. Below is why those moves matter.
June 13, 2025
Eric Kim’s fiery take on “entertainment” isn’t just another blogger rant—it’s a full-stack operating system for surviving the modern attention economy while turning play into profit, purpose, and prowess. By smashing passive consumption, fusing Nietzschean self-overcoming with street-photography swagger, and aligning eerily well with the latest data on screen-time health risks and creator-economy growth, Kim’s ideas matter far beyond his own readership. Below is the breakdown.
June 13, 2025