Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Phillips started bodybuilding in 1982, then moved to Southern California to train at Gold's Gym Venice beach (known as the Mecca of bodybuilding) in 1983, remaining until 1986, a period during which Phillips admits to steroid use, at different times cycling on Deca Durabolin, Andriol, Sustanon, and other drugs that helped him grow from 185 lbs ...
Bill Phillips (January 28, 1936 – August 23, 2010) was an American country music singer. He was born in Canton, North Carolina, and his professional music career started with the Old Southern Jamboree on WMIL in Miami in 1955. He moved to Nashville in 1957 and worked with Johnnie Wright and Kitty Wells until the late 1970s.
Phillips was born at Te Rehunga near Dannevirke, New Zealand, to Harold Housego Phillips, a dairy farmer, and his wife, Edith Webber, a schoolteacher and postmistress. [1] A mechanical aptitude began to emerge at an early age: at fifteen, Bill learned how to fix a motor vehicle engine, how to wire a shed for electrical lighting, build radios, and create a crude form of cinematography.
Bill Phillips (singer) (1936–2010), country music singer from the 1950s and 1960s Bill Phillips (author) (born 1964), fitness and nutrition author Billy Phillips (TV personality) , Geordie Shore participant
Body for Life (BFL) is a 12-week nutrition and exercise program, and also an annual physique transformation competition. The program utilizes a low-fat high-protein diet.It was created by Bill Phillips, a former competitive bodybuilder and previous owner of EAS, a manufacturer of nutritional supplements.
William Daniel Phillips (born November 5, 1948) is an American physicist. He shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1997 with Steven Chu and Claude Cohen-Tannoudji . Biography
Bill Phillips (September 28, 1934 – December 17, 2014) was an American sound editor. He won a British Academy Film Award and was nominated for another one in the category Best Sound for the films Good Morning, Vietnam and Mississippi Burning .
William B. Phillips (April 30, 1857 – October 7, 1900), also known as "Silver Bill", [1] was a Canadian professional baseball first baseman from the mid-1870s until the late 1880s.