Review of
The Third Ripped DVD: Motivation
With Clarence Bass
Review by Greg Sushinsky
Prepare to be subtly, slowly drawn into a fascinating world of intense
athletic motivation, which is sure to challenge and enrich your training
- whatever you do - and your results.
This DVD
begins easily, quietly, with two gentlemen, who turn out to be elite master’s
athletes, who are
about to let you deep into their inner world of how they achieve their athletic
success. One of the gents,
bodybuilding filmmaker/historian Wayne Gallasch, talks quietly, in even tones,
with some questioning by the
other fellow, who happens to be Clarence Bass, of legendary Ripped fame. Once
you settle in, you quickly
sense this is no ordinary casual conversation, no mere shooting the kitchen
breeze, but something special
for bodybuilders, lifters, fitness and sports enthusiasts of every level.
Instead, this conversation is a portal into the world of motivation,
specifically athletic motivation or sports
motivation, as Clarence and Wayne ease you into their world via an almost casual
rendering of Wayne’s
transformation from a fitness athlete (no small thing in itself) into the
world’s best indoor rower at 500 meters,
an astounding athletic metamorphosis. Clarence leads on by some questions,
gently coaxing, prodding, and
pointing—not without some measure of pride—as it turns out, and he would have to
be regarded as the
catalyst for Wayne’s amazing athletic breakthrough.
We can save most of the details for the DVD, but you can trace Wayne’s growth
from an almost casual
interest when Clarence, who had already been intensely training and testing
himself in indoor rowing for a
couple of years, shared his enthusiasm and knowledge about indoor rowing with
Wayne, until Wayne tried it
and, as we might say, got the bug. Did he ever.
The mere re-telling of Wayne’s progression from having a curiosity about indoor
rowing into a full-fledged fall
into the seductive allure of first self-improvement, then rowing for faster
times, to chasing still faster times,
personal bests, all growing challenges via submitting to and embracing the
physical effort and yes, pain of
effort (make friends with extreme lactic acid burn, breathlessness and fatigue),
doesn’t do justice to the
enterprise. Seeing it on the DVD does.
Something fascinating happens on this film. As Clarence and Wayne talk about the
rowing, as they recount
Wayne’s progression, the seemingly casual atmosphere of the kitchen conversation
intensifies, the air
becomes charged. When you hear of Wayne’s impressive accomplishments in such a
short time, punctuated
by Clarence’s pithy and sometimes self-deprecating comments, it offsets nicely
the nature of the beast:
challenging and achieving personal bests is a deep test of the body, mind and
will, that needs to be
approached seriously with resolve.
As we move from talk to action, the DVD presents visual evidence of the rowing
prowess, as Wayne goes for
a serious, blazing demonstration. We won’t tell you how it comes out, but not
one to be confined to talking,
Clarence also lines up and takes the pulling medicine, as he gears up for a
shot. Though he encounters a
glitch in form partway through his mighty effort (he slips on the seat, causing
precious time to be lost), the
white-hot efforts burn through the camera. Again, the honest and
self-deprecating remarks by Bass add to
the flavor of the post-effort commentary.
With rare honesty and compelling insight, Clarence recounts how the rapid
progress of Wayne, which
threatened to eclipse mentor Clarence’s rowing achievements, also threatened to
plunge Clarence
downward into a permanent over-training spiral in a desperate attempt to regain
friendly competitive ground,
to simply keep up. This honesty that permeates this DVD is a hallmark of its
value.
Eventually, lessons learned, Clarence is back on track—his own track—as he
successfully continues to
motivate, challenge himself, conquer and progress. And Wayne just keeps on
going. It is a fascinating
journey, almost a deconstruction, into the process of the minds and motivation
of what are a couple of truly
elite master’s athletes.
The best yet: Tina, Wayne’s wife, who grew up discouraged and not a participant
in sport, came to be first
intrigued by not only lifting weights (through Wayne’s example) but also indoor
rowing. Her progression is far
more stunning than either her husband or Clarence’s, for they had been athletes,
lifters, bodybuilders,
fitness practitioners. Tina had not.
In less than a couple of years, Tina submitted herself to the school of learning
and challenging and finding
herself, and in an almost revelatory way, discovered a love for sport, for
challenge, and a large capacity to
achieve. In short, Tina revealed an hitherto unknown interest and ability, and
was soon rowing impressive
times along with our two other sporting gentlemen. She, too, shows her form and
impressive ability onscreen.
This DVD stirs the blood. It is not merely motivational, but inspirational. It
would be something every athlete,
competitor, or even fitness person should see. It reminds us of possibilities,
and yes, the caution is these are
trained and perhaps even gifted master’s athletes, and everyone cannot achieve
at the highest levels, but
you can find yourself at whatever level you wish to participate—and that is what
Clarence Bass emphasizes
in his message—find your sport, compete with yourself. The quest is really for
self-mastery, the journey
never ends, nor do the joys of the challenge and the work of the pursuit.
Copyright © 2005, Greg Sushinsky, All Rights Reserved.
www.gregsushinsky.com
To order: See Videos
Ripped Enterprises, P.O. Box 51236, Albuquerque, New Mexico
87181-1236 or street address: 528 Chama, N.E., Albuquerque, New Mexico 87108, Phone
(505) 266-5858, e-mail: cncbass@aol.com,
FAX: (505) 266-9123. Office hours: Monday-Friday, 8-5,
Mountain time. FAX for international orders: Please check with your
local phone book and add the following: 505 266-9123
[Home] [Philosophy]
[What's New] [Products]
[FAQ] [Feedback] [Order]