When I first started hosting BodyRock I was 31 years old. I had a rocking body I thought and I was strong and fast, and although I never expected to be leading workouts for millions of people a week on the BodyRock YouTube Channel, I took on that role with all the tenacity and heart I could muster. Admittedly, I was stepping into some pretty big shoes and the only photos I had ever taken were of my sister and I on vacation.
The YouTube comments let me know that my body was too skinny, too gangly, too flat in places it should have been round, too boyish: too, too, too. I expected that kind of reaction; after all, the lads at my gym in the UK would offer those kinds of jibes up on the bounce all in good nature, and only after I would out-rep them in almost everything. I know that everyone has been labeled ugly at one time or another even if it was just on the playground by some childhood nemesis.
But imagine being told that you are ugly on a networked, amplified globally industrial scale. When you are reaching tens of millions of people, not everyone is going to be nice.
Like I said, I was expecting criticism. For every mean comment, there were dozens of positive ones. There was always a kind BodyRocker that would jump in to defend me. Not my fitness: I was in the best shape of my life. I doubted my beauty. I started to look for things to change in the mirror. But now, I was surveying the contours of my face for things to change, inflate, or chisel away. In October, the couple abruptly announced they would separate.
The couple developed Bodyrock. Tv as a kind of reality show. But unlike Jersey Shore or the Bachelor , shows premised on human frailty, they crafted the Bodyrock message as an aspirational one: anyone can, like Zuzana, build a better life through exercise. Born in Prague to a single mother, Zuzana dropped out of business college at 18 and fell into adult entertainment. She was saved, in a way, when she met Freddy. They married in in a castle outside Prague, and began Bodyrock.
Tv apart from other home exercise competition. By July , their videos hit a million views and they were partnering with YouTube, untapping a lucrative future. Tv had reached million views, they were making hundreds of dollars a week. More than of them commented on the breakup post. The Lights have yet to officially file for a divorce, but plan to meet face-to-face in December.
That is all that I do, and all that Deanna does. People think we are Superhuman, but honestly, it's as simple as setting aside 12 minutes a day. Watch the Video Now above!! Go to the featured video above and watch what she says about staying healthy and what works for her! If you loved the video, get more of Deanna -- five days of Deanna's workouts and burnouts to be exact.
She is a wonderful presence in your life. She is strong, grounded, and inspiring. You've seen her philosophy, now let her kick your butt!! Have you checked out all the gear in our store yet?
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