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  2. You're Doing the Cable Crossover All Wrong. Do This Instead.

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/youre-doing-cable...

    A fitness expert explains how to do the cable crossover exercise, including better variations, sets and reps, and how to incorporate it into your workouts. You're Doing the Cable Crossover All ...

  3. BBB Reveals America's Most Complained-About Businesses - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2012-03-02-bbb-reveals-americas...

    Others, with increases ranging from 41% to 72%, included book publishers, cell-phone equipment/supplies, telephone companies, electronic equipment repair/service, florists, travel clubs, general ...

  4. Soloflex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soloflex

    Soloflex home gym machines use an elastic element to provide resistance. The product also comes with an instructional DVD. Soloflex's WBV Platform made news in July 2007 for a Consumer Reports review that demonstrated it had been using claims from research that may not apply to their machine. [3] "At press time, even the research on its Website ...

  5. Influencer Brittany Dawn settles lawsuit over alleged fitness ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/influencer-brittany-dawn...

    The lawsuit, which was filed by the state of Texas in February 2022, alleges that Davis sold thousands of supposedly personalized online health and fitness plans costing from $92 to $300 beginning ...

  6. Cable machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cable_machine

    The upright row is one exercise that can be performed on the cable machine. A cable machine is an item of equipment used in weight training or functional training.It consists of a rectangular, vertically oriented steel frame about 3 metres wide and 2 metres high, with a weight stack attached via a cable and pulley system to one or more handles. [1]

  7. Gym Source - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gym_Source

    It helped company in to turn out as a leading distributor of fitness equipment. In 1995, Gym Source was the third-largest distributor of Life Fitness equipment in the country. By 2012, the company had nearly $100 million in revenue and gained exclusivity contracts with fitness equipment manufacturers.

  8. Life Fitness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_Fitness

    The same year, Life Fitness expanded into treadmills. Life Fitness was acquired by Brunswick Corporation in June 1997 for $310 million. [5] [6] The sale was completed on July 11, 1997. [7] Later in 1997, Life Fitness bought Hammer Strength, a manufacturer of weight machines. [8] ParaBody, Inc. was bought by Life Fitness in 1998. [9] [10]

  9. Rogue Fitness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogue_Fitness

    Rogue originally started in 2007 in Toledo, Ohio, by Bill Henniger when he had difficulty finding the necessary equipment for his new gym, a CrossFit affiliate.He set up an e-commerce one-stop site roguefitness.com, with the intention of selling all the equipment necessary for a CrossFit gym. [2]

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