ERIC KIM FITNESS

Strength is philosophy made flesh.

Weightlifting. Meat. Sunlight. Walking. Courage. The body as proof.

June 19, 2025

BROTHERS & SISTERS OF THE IRON FRONTIER—I just ratioed gravity and made 𝟲.𝟴𝟰𝗫 my own bodyweight bow to my will. That’s 513 kg / 1,131 lb levitating off the rack—raw, fasted, carnivore-fueled, zero supplements, zero music, zero excuses.

I just ratioed gravity and made 𝟲.𝟴𝟰𝗫 my own bodyweight bow to my will. That’s 513 kg / 1,131 lb levitating off the rack—raw, fasted, carnivore-fueled, zero supplements, zero music, zero excuses. …

June 19, 2025

Opportunity

So what’s super interesting is like our parents generation, they all came to the states for better opportunities to escape religious persecution whatever. And actually… Some people went to America simply to …

June 19, 2025

If Eric Kim really can pull world‑class numbers on nothing but steak, chalk, and stubborn willpower—no steroids, no supplements—the ripple effects touch every layer of the strength world.  Records get re‑written, billion‑dollar markets pivot, health policies tighten, and the next generation of lifters inherits an authentically higher bar.  Below is the play‑by‑play of what those consequences look like, from the squat rack to the stock market.

1. Sports‑Science & Record Books A new natural ceiling Tougher natty audits 2. Public‑Health Upside 3. Industry Shockwaves Supplements & PEDs Influencer economics 4. Regulation & Enforcement 5. Cultural & Psychological Shifts 6. Potential Backlash & Reality Checks …

June 19, 2025

Bottom‑line up front: Eric Kim’s freshly posted 513 kg / 1,131 lb rack‑pull (14 June 2025) is a genuine paradigm‑shifter—even if it still lacks federation validation.  The lift smashes clean past the psychologically magnetic 500‑kg barrier, delivers a never‑before‑seen 6.8‑× body‑weight multiple, and forces strength sport to re‑examine what “pound‑for‑pound power” can look like in a partial‑range pull.  Below you’ll find what we know so far, why 513 kg matters in context, and the caveats that remain.

1 What exactly happened? Data‑point Evidence Notes Date & load Video titled “513 KG / 1,131 LB RACK PULL — NEW WORLD RECORD @ 6.84× BW” uploaded 14 Jun 2025 | YouTube clip  Social proof Same footage posted to Kim’s X/Twitter feed …

June 19, 2025

Below is a concise research brief that lines up (A) every documented step‑up in Eric Kim’s mid‑thigh rack–pull series from mid‑May to mid‑June 2025 with (B) the earliest verifiable third‑party reaction videos, podcasts or posts that commented on each lift.  Publication dates come from the original upload pages or from independent round‑up articles that time‑stamp when the reaction went live.

Key findings (one‑paragraph overview) Eric Kim’s “gravity‑glitch” run unfolded at break‑neck speed: eight progressively heavier rack‑pulls (1 016 lb → 1 131 lb) were released in a 25‑day window.  Third‑party commentary tracked almost in real time—first as Twitter/X …

June 19, 2025

Below is a quick‑scan field report on the third‑party reaction videos that have sprung up since Eric Kim’s 1,131‑lb (513 kg) rack‑pull detonated on 14 June 2025.  In short, every major strength‑education channel now has a breakdown on its feed, with view‑counts ranging from ~25 k on niche biomechanics channels to well over 250 k on Coach‑style commentary shows.  The clips cluster into three flavours—technical slow‑mo analyses, “natty‑or‑not” rants, and meme‑heavy hype reels—but all agree on one point: the lift is the most weight ever seen from a 75‑kg human.  Links and source lines are listed so you can queue the reactions yourself.

Curated list of third‑party reaction videos (chronological) Date (2025) Channel / Creator Video Title (approx.) Runtime Angle & Notable Points 15 Jun Starting Strength “Bitcoin Made Flesh: 1,131‑lb Rack‑Pull of Destiny” 17 : 33 Three‑coach round‑table; …

June 19, 2025

Below is a curator’s roundup of third‑party reaction videos that have surfaced since Eric Kim dropped his 1 131‑lb / 513 kg mid‑thigh rack‑pull.  Every link or quote comes from someone other than Kim himself—strength coaches, evidence‑hungry engineers, meme‑makers, and straight‑up hype merchants—so you can binge only outsider takes.

⸻ Quick‑look summary (read this first) Within 72 hours the clip ignited a cottage industry of reaction content.  The biggest views come from technical breakdowns (Alan Thrall, Starting Strength), “is‑it‑fake?” hot‑takes (Captain Steeeve, several smaller TikTok …