UPDATE - 12. September:
The updated version of The Workout Paradox video is now live: https://kgs.link/WorkoutUpdate
After hearing your feedback on our initial video, we consulted experts, revised the script, and added more information to the parts that were too simplified. All changes and the link to the original video (now unlisted) are listed in the infobox over on YouTube for full transparency.
This experience was uncomfortable, but ultimately encouraging for us. It reminded us that it is a challenge to make ten-minute videos on complex topics without cutting too much and that we need to be constantly aware of this. Thanks again for your honest feedback and for helping us get better. We truly appreciate it.
Special thanks to Ben Carpenter for his support on the rework!
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UPDATE - 23. July:
After reading your feedback and looking into it, we have to say you are right: our video on the Workout Paradox was too simplified and didn't explain things clearly enough. Scripts start out more detailed and then get shortened, and this time we obviously overdid it. This is exactly the kind of stuff we try to avoid, but we went too far, and this hurt the message and the science we wanted to explain. What now? We are editing the script, adding more information, including more expert feedback, and will update the video as soon as possible. After this is set and done, we’ll do a review to see how we can avoid this in the future. We’ll keep you posted!
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Losing weight is hard and unfortunately, your body is sabotaging you every step of the way.
Your body is a biological machine that follows the laws of thermodynamics and needs energy and raw materials to stay alive, which is why you eat. The energy from food is measured in calories and you need a certain amount to power your internal machines. Your brain thinks, your heart pumps, your gut digests, and your immune system immunes. And you contract your muscles to move around.
The harder a movement is, the more calories you burn. An hour of walking burns about 260 calories, moderate swimming 430, biking 600, running 700.
If you eat more calories than you burn, your body stores them mostly in the form of fat. One kilogram, or two pounds, of fat is about 7000 calories. Seems simple. To lose weight, you have to burn more than you eat, so fat is turned back into energy.
There are two ways to do this: Eating less – which we will cover in another video – and burning more, say by moving around aimlessly, also called working out. We also get told early on that exercising is healthy somehow, so working out should kill two birds with one stone.
Unfortunately, this doesn’t exactly work out. It is one of these frustrating experiences where you do what you think is right only to not see the results you deserve. In reality, exercising is a bad way to burn fat. And until recently we fundamentally misunderstood what moving around a lot does to our bodies.
Stewart Lawrence III
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