I found two more brochures that are related to two other posts that I've posted this month. First here's a 1977 brochure to Six Flags Over Texas...
This Six Flags brochure prominently features Professor Cyrus Cosmo, which the internet tells me was character created exclusively for the park. It's reported Professor Cyrus Cosmo came into existence because Six Flag's contract with Sid and Marty Krofft and there characters ended. I wonder if Six Flags Over Texas once had a Krofft puppet show like Kings Island had?
Lastly is another brochure for Silver Springs this time from 1993...
Showing posts with label reto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reto. Show all posts
Sunday, June 30, 2013
More Flags and Springs
Labels:
brochures,
reto,
Silver Springs,
Six Flags
Saturday, January 12, 2013
New Year's Resolution
Hey it's 2013, and this is my first post of the new year.
You know, with the new year ending in the number 13 I thought I'd hear news reports of people stricken with a serious case of triskaidekaphobia, but I guess the entire media was preoccupied with the whole “fiscal cliff” thing.
Anyways I digress, a lot of people make New Year's resolutions around fitness. "I'm going to loose weight" or "I'm going to exercise more" are resolutions made with the best of intentions that are mostly forgotten by February. So to kick of the new year I thought I look back at a once very popular, but now basically kaput fitness system.
Personal confession time, I tried the Cybergenics system back in the 1990's...
My Cybergenics system didn't come with the entire array of supplements shown in the 1992 ad above (I wonder what's in the bottle with the eyedropper top on the very end). There's some high prices on that ad, and lucky I didn't pay that much for my system. I truly didn't expect to look like Franco Santoriello (the bodybuilder flexing in the upper right corner), but I figured even if it helps a little bit it was worth it.
Cybergenics was heavily advertized on TV. Maybe you remember this sexy commercial...
If you didn't like that romance cover model-like spot, how about a "humorous" one with a former SNL funnyman...
Where have you gone, Joe Piscopo ? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you (Woo, woo, woo).
Did it work? Well I didn't find any magic in those supplements that came with the system. The real key to the Cybergenics program was in the small 5 X 4 inch "Phase 1 Manual."
And more specifically the "Zero-Effort Principle" training regime that was covered on 15 pages of the aproxamatly 55 page manual...
What was the "Zero-Effort Principle?" It sounds easy, "zero-effort," but in reality it should be called "maximum-effort." This training principle is basically to go heavy as possible. You would first determine what is the maximum weight you could lift in one rep for a given exercise, and then work with 90% or 80% of that weight until failure. For the next set go with 70% or 50% to failure, followed with 40% to failure. In order to correctly archive this you'll need a spotter/workout partner, and a proper gym. Sorry if you were thinking you could do this all alone in your basement with a set of free weights.
Anyways the Cybergenics people were at one time making a lot of money off the system, and branched out with a number of different products like a "mega-fat loss system" called Cybertrim...
Wait a minute, the same model that was featured in the Cybergenics print ad is used in this ad too. So what is it? Did he use Cybergenics or Cybertrim? Hmm, something doesn't seem right.
The original Cybergenics manufacturer is no longer in business, but after a little Googling it appears someone has obtained the Cybergenics name, and it's back in some kind of fashion. I don't know anything about this "new" Cybergenics system, but as Mike Brady once told his son Greg, "Caveat emptor."
You know, with the new year ending in the number 13 I thought I'd hear news reports of people stricken with a serious case of triskaidekaphobia, but I guess the entire media was preoccupied with the whole “fiscal cliff” thing.
Anyways I digress, a lot of people make New Year's resolutions around fitness. "I'm going to loose weight" or "I'm going to exercise more" are resolutions made with the best of intentions that are mostly forgotten by February. So to kick of the new year I thought I look back at a once very popular, but now basically kaput fitness system.
Personal confession time, I tried the Cybergenics system back in the 1990's...
My Cybergenics system didn't come with the entire array of supplements shown in the 1992 ad above (I wonder what's in the bottle with the eyedropper top on the very end). There's some high prices on that ad, and lucky I didn't pay that much for my system. I truly didn't expect to look like Franco Santoriello (the bodybuilder flexing in the upper right corner), but I figured even if it helps a little bit it was worth it.
Cybergenics was heavily advertized on TV. Maybe you remember this sexy commercial...
If you didn't like that romance cover model-like spot, how about a "humorous" one with a former SNL funnyman...
Where have you gone, Joe Piscopo ? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you (Woo, woo, woo).
Did it work? Well I didn't find any magic in those supplements that came with the system. The real key to the Cybergenics program was in the small 5 X 4 inch "Phase 1 Manual."
And more specifically the "Zero-Effort Principle" training regime that was covered on 15 pages of the aproxamatly 55 page manual...
What was the "Zero-Effort Principle?" It sounds easy, "zero-effort," but in reality it should be called "maximum-effort." This training principle is basically to go heavy as possible. You would first determine what is the maximum weight you could lift in one rep for a given exercise, and then work with 90% or 80% of that weight until failure. For the next set go with 70% or 50% to failure, followed with 40% to failure. In order to correctly archive this you'll need a spotter/workout partner, and a proper gym. Sorry if you were thinking you could do this all alone in your basement with a set of free weights.
Anyways the Cybergenics people were at one time making a lot of money off the system, and branched out with a number of different products like a "mega-fat loss system" called Cybertrim...
Wait a minute, the same model that was featured in the Cybergenics print ad is used in this ad too. So what is it? Did he use Cybergenics or Cybertrim? Hmm, something doesn't seem right.
The original Cybergenics manufacturer is no longer in business, but after a little Googling it appears someone has obtained the Cybergenics name, and it's back in some kind of fashion. I don't know anything about this "new" Cybergenics system, but as Mike Brady once told his son Greg, "Caveat emptor."
Labels:
ads,
commercial,
fitness,
muscle,
reto
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