Connect with us

Fitness

Jessica Biel on Justin Timberlake as a workout buddy: 'So much more fun'

Published

on

Jessica Biel on Justin Timberlake as a workout buddy: 'So much more fun'

When it comes to her workout routine, Jessica Biel seems to have an enviable mantra: Can’t stop, won’t stop.

The actor regularly inspires fans with videos of her intense sweat sessions and she exhibits laser focus while executing tricky moves like single-leg pistol squats.

It appears nothing can distract Biel from her fitness goals — not even her husband, Justin Timberlake, who has been known to bust a move to make her laugh while she’s working out.

Wondering where the star’s dedication to fitness comes from and how she stays red carpet ready? Here’s everything the 42-year-old has said about her workout routine and diet.

Yoga is a big part of her life

Yoga can help tone and strengthen your body, but it can also refresh your mind, and that’s one of the many reasons Biel was initially drawn to yoga in her twenties.

Advertisement

“I was searching for my identity as a person, and what defines me,” she told Women’s Health. “And yoga became a space where I can really touch back into myself and my spirituality.”

The star quickly found a sense of community while attending classes and she continues to practice yoga 20-30 minutes each day when she can.

“It’s become so much more than an exercise—more of a stress reliever and a life calmer,” she said. “It just helps me with everything that I have to do in my life.”

Of course, Biel also enjoys the physical benefits of yoga and told Elle it keeps her muscles “long and flexible.”

The actor has dabbled in several forms of yoga, including Ashtanga yoga, a practice that emphasizes synchronized breath and movement.

Advertisement

“You put in effort to learn and memorize all these movements, and then you can be in almost a completely meditative state when you’re going through the process, because you’re going at your own pace and the speed of your own breath,” she told Self in 2018. “It’s been a wonderful way to practice my at-home yoga.”

She loves working out with her husband and sons

Finding the motivation to go to the gym is a lot easier when you’re working out with someone else. Luckily for Biel, her husband is a ready and willing exercise partner.

“We’ll work with a trainer and just do different circuits and do different types of cardio training or sprinting, just different things depending on what we’re working on and goals we’re trying to hit at the time,” she told Self in 2018.

Biel told Women’s Health she adores exercising with her hubby, saying, it’s “so much more fun to do it with someone else.”

The couple’s two sons also get in on the action from time to time.

Advertisement

“We work out together a ton,” Biel told Women’s Health.

The actor’s trainer will teach her eldest son, Silas, a modified version of his parents’ routine and will have her youngest son, Phineas, stretch or walk on the treadmill.

“He’ll give Silas what he’s doing, Justin’s doing something, I’m doing something,” she said. “We’re all doing it together and it’s really fun.”

She avoids workout ruts by trying a variety of exercises

Yoga holds a special place in Biel’s heart, but she also enjoys switching things up and trying different workouts, including boxing, martial arts, snowboarding, hiking and more.

“I love working out with a trainer, doing circuit work and strengthening. I think the lengthening and internal breathing you get from yoga, (in addition to) strength training of weights and circuits and cardiovascular, to me that’s the perfect combination,” she told Women’s Health in 2018.

Advertisement

Her squat game is on point

Squats seem to be Biel’s workout superpower and the fitness buff has shown off her perfect form on several occasions.

In 2018, Biel tried her hand at single-leg pistol squats and totally nailed the tricky move.

The following year, Biel mastered the art of skater squats and her personal trainer Ben Bruno showed off her handiwork on Instagram as she performed six reps.

“This is just nuts. This isn’t something we did one time for the video either; this was her third set and I have her do these routinely. It’s really a wonder she hasn’t fired me yet,” he captioned the post.

She tailors her training based on her current goals

Biel certainly has go-to workouts that she loves, but she often switches up her training depending on the project she’s working on or a goal she wants to achieve.

Advertisement

For instance, the star walked a lot with a 30-pound backpack on an incline when she hiked Mt. Kilimanjaro in 2010 to raise awareness about the global water crisis.

“I also tried to spend as much time in altitude as I possibly could, which was really key. Altitude really affects you in weird ways,” she told the Los Angeles Times.

Before the 2024 Met Gala, Biel focused on arm moves such as tricep pushdowns and lat pull-downs so she could highlight certain features based on her outfit. Additionally, the star snuck in plenty of cardio, squats and lunges before the event.

“What I’m wearing will be all upper body-exposed, like arms, collarbone, shoulders, upper back, lats,” she told Women’s Health. “There’s an emphasis on just toning there.”

She doesn’t mind staying up late to work out

Biel prefers to work out in the morning to “get it out of the way,” she told Self. However, she’s not opposed to nighttime sweat sessions.

Advertisement

“I’ve definitely been known to be in the gym late night, even 10 or 11 p.m. Keep in mind, that is ‘late night’ for me these days,” she said.

When she’s working out at night, Biel usually opts for a circuit workout or yoga.

“Sometimes, you just gotta do it and fit it in when you can,” she said.

She sticks to ‘boring’ but effective fitness tricks

When it comes to fitness, there’s no such thing as a magic trick to whip us all into shape. But we can learn a thing or two from Biel’s simple, yet smart fitness habits.

“For me, getting enough sleep, drinking lots of water, having a healthy diet, and staying away from alcohol are musts. It’s so boring, I know, but doing those things really helps,” she told Elle in 2011.

Advertisement

Her perspective on fitness has evolved

With age comes wisdom, and Biel has shifted her mindset on fitness over time.

“When I was in my twenties, it was important to me how much I could bench press and how ripped my shoulders are, and all that stuff is less important to me now,” she told Women’s Health in 2024. “What’s important to me now is mobility. I don’t want to be living with pain.”

For this reason, the actor is a fan of Pilates since it helps gain strength and enhance joint health.

Her diet is all about ‘balance’

Too much of a good thing is never great, and Biel told the Los Angeles Times her diet mantra is all about “creating a balance.”

“I just try to eat really healthy. I mean, of course I have cheat-days and will go out and have, like, cookies and pizza. If I’m training maybe I up the protein intake…. I don’t do so much eating for training unless I’m really training for something specific,” she said in 2017.

Advertisement

Biel did acknowledge that she feels “better” when she avoids gluten, wheat and dairy.

“My digestion is better, I feel better, I have more energy,” she said.

The star also tries to load up on greens from her home garden and said she enjoys making salads with spinach, radishes and other healthy options.

“If I’m home for lunch, I run out to the garden and grab some leaves and throw together a quick salad, maybe throw some quinoa in there or something, or I like these veggie burgers that you can get from Whole Foods or Erewhon and you can grill it up and throw it on top with some nuts… and then some kind of snack during the day — maybe gluten-free pretzels with this really yummy almond cheese dip. It almost tastes like cream cheese, but no dairy,” she said.

She encourages her kids to eat healthy but isn’t unreasonable

Getting kids to eat their fruits and vegetables can be a struggle, but Biel is trying to lead by example.

Advertisement

“We all eat healthy — I mean, we try to. Silas (her oldest son) is a kid, so sometimes he doesn’t want to eat that broccoli or eat that spinach, so you go, ‘All right, pasta it is,’ or ‘French fries it is,’” she told the Los Angeles Times.

Biel and Timberlake try their best to encourage their kids to eat healthy foods, but they’re also not militant on the matter.

“We were talking about it yesterday and Justin said, ‘Do our kids need to eat more vegetables?’” she recently told Women’s Health. “I was like, ‘Yeah, but everybody kind of needs to eat more vegetables! Everyone in the whole world.’”

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Fitness

“Forget living longer, exercise can make life easier right now”—a 72-year-old fitness influencer and marathon runner shares two accessible ways to start moving

Published

on

“Forget living longer, exercise can make life easier right now”—a 72-year-old fitness influencer and marathon runner shares two accessible ways to start moving

Retirement is often a time when people slow down, but in Christine Hobson’s case, she’s speeding up. When her daughter persuaded her to join a running club so she wouldn’t get bored, she had no idea she’d get the fitness bug and run 125 marathons in total, visiting all seven continents.

And the 72-year-old former teacher has plans to run the North Pole marathon in 2027.

Continue Reading

Fitness

Why 21-15-9 Might be the Smartest Workout Format in Fitness – and How to Use it to Drive Muscle Growth

Published

on

Why 21-15-9 Might be the Smartest Workout Format in Fitness – and How to Use it to Drive Muscle Growth

CrossFit means a lot of things to a lot of people – because it’s made up of a lot of things.

Since the rise of the fitness giant, countless brands, events and training methods have sprung up around it – not claiming to be CrossFit, but looking suspiciously CrossFit-esque.

There are, however, a handful of things that are uniquely CrossFit: the ‘Girls’ benchmark workouts. The Hero WODs and, of course, its signature rep schemes.

Chief among them is ’21-15-9′.

The 21-15-9 rep scheme may just be the single most CrossFit thing in existence. But what exactly is it? Where did it come from? And why might it actually be better at building muscle in a hurry than its conditioning roots would have you believe?

Advertisement

Let’s have a look.

What Is 21-15-9?

If you’ve never encountered it before, the format couldn’t be simpler. Choose two exercises (occasionally more) and perform 21 reps of each, then 15 reps of each, then nine reps of each, completing the entire workout as quickly as possible – with good form.

Probably the best-known example is ‘Fran’: 21 thrusters and pull-ups, followed by 15 of each, then nine. On paper it doesn’t look especially intimidating. In practice, it’s one of the most feared benchmark workouts in fitness.

Where Did it Come From?

Unlike many modern training methods, 21-15-9 didn’t come out of a study. It came from the gym floor.

CrossFit founder Greg Glassman has explained that the format emerged through years of coaching and experimentation in the 1990s. Rather than chasing a perfect sets-and-reps prescription, he was looking for a workout that allowed athletes to maintain a high power output from start to finish.

Advertisement

The thinking is surprisingly elegant. You begin with 21 reps while fresh. By the time you reach the set of 15, your ability to produce force has already fallen. By the final nine, you’re significantly more fatigued – but the workload has dropped by almost the same amount.

Instead of grinding through increasingly miserable sets of the same length, the workout ‘meets you where you are’, reducing the work required as your capacity declines. The result is a workout that encourages you to keep moving instead of standing around trying to recover.

The numbers themselves are also remarkably practical. Forty-five total reps per movement provides plenty of training volume without turning the session into an endurance slog, while every set divides neatly into thirds if you need to break it up.

(Although I’ve got to be honest, I’m a 20-15-10-5 man myself, just for the sake of round numbers.)

Why Does it Work So Well?

Although there isn’t research showing that 21-15-9 is somehow the magic formula, there are obvious reasons why it consistently produces brutally effective workouts.

Advertisement

Descending reps help maintain intensity. As fatigue accumulates, reducing the target allows movement quality, bar speed and overall work rate to stay higher than they would if you simply repeated the same number of reps over and over.

It also tends to land in a physiological sweet spot. Most 21-15-9 workouts take between three and eight minutes, depending on the movements and the athlete. That’s long enough to create a serious cardiovascular challenge while still requiring meaningful force production throughout. You’re taxing your anaerobic systems hard while relying on your aerobic system to help you recover just enough to keep going.

Finally, there’s the psychological trick. The hardest-looking part comes first. Once you’ve survived the opening 21, every remaining round appears more manageable. ‘Only 15 left.’ Then, ‘Just nine.’ In reality, you’re becoming more fatigued with every rep, but the shrinking target keeps you attacking the workout instead of pacing too conservatively.

Why it Might be Surprisingly Good for Building Muscle

Perhaps the biggest misconception about 21-15-9 is that it’s ‘just cardio with weights’.

Choose the right load and something interesting happens. Very few athletes complete every round unbroken. Instead, the workout naturally evolves into a series of short, broken sets separated by only a few seconds of rest.

Advertisement

Your 21 might become 11-5-5. Your 15 becomes 8-4-3. Your final nine might stay unbroken – or become 5-4.

In effect, you’ve accidentally turned the workout into a form of rest-pause training.

Those brief pauses allow just enough recovery to squeeze out more high-quality repetitions before fatigue catches up again. By the latter stages of each mini-set, you’re repeatedly working very close to failure, recruiting the high-threshold motor units with the greatest potential for muscle growth.

It’s a similar principle to rest-pause training, myo-reps and cluster sets: all methods used to accumulate hypertrophy-friendly volume while keeping the load relatively heavy and the rest periods brutally short.

You’re basically speed-running a large number of hard, growth-stimulating reps in a very small window of time. Could this help explain why elite CrossFit athletes often carry an impressive amount of muscle despite spending relatively little time performing traditional bodybuilding splits?

Advertisement

It’s certainly plausible, although the ‘elite’ part often selects for athletes with the greatest muscle-building potential.

Much of their training isn’t simply conditioning. It’s high-density resistance training performed under accumulating fatigue, with only fleeting recovery between efforts. In other words, they’re often doing something bodybuilders have deliberately programmed for decades: packing a lot of hard work into a very short period of time.

That’s not to say 21-15-9 is superior to a well-designed hypertrophy programme. If your sole goal is building muscle, there are more efficient ways to do it.

But if you’re looking for a workout that develops fitness, tests your mettle and still provides a meaningful stimulus for strength and size, it’s easy to see why this deceptively simple rep scheme has remained one of CrossFit’s defining fingerprints for more than 20 years.

Best Bodyweight 21-15-9 Workout: ‘JT’

If you’re looking for an interesting twist on the 21-15-9 format, look no further than Hero WOD ‘JT’, which concentrates the muscle-building potential of the format into a brutal upper-body workout.

Advertisement

Created in honour of Petty Officer 1st Class Jeff Taylor, who was killed in Afghanistan in 2006, the workout strips away barbells altogether and relies solely on three bodyweight movements:

21-15-9 reps of:

Don’t let the lack of equipment fool you. The volume – 45 reps of each movement, 135 reps in total – combined with the descending rep scheme makes this a brutal upper-body test, hammering the shoulders, chest and triceps while demanding serious muscular endurance.

Better still, it perfectly demonstrates one of the biggest strengths of 21-15-9. As fatigue mounts and the sets naturally fragment, the workout begins to resemble one giant rest-pause set, allowing you to accumulate a huge number of hard, near-failure reps in less than 10 minutes.

If your goal is building an impressive upper body while developing serious work capacity, there are few bodyweight workouts that deliver quite so much bang for your buck, making ‘JT’ one of my personal favourites.

Advertisement

fitness magazine cover featuring a muscular man with kettlebells

If there’s one thing Kori Sampson knows, it’s how to optimise your body composition for performance. To tap into his knowledge as an elite athlete and coach, we asked him to create a 4-week plan to help you move faster, recover quicker and keep pushing when the fatigue sets in – all while improving your muscle-to-fat ratio.

Ready to build muscle, burn fat and come out the other side looking, feeling and performing better? Click here to get 14 days of free access to the plan via the Men’s Health app.


Continue Reading

Fitness

10 minutes of swimming might not sound worth it – but I tried it for 2 weeks and found the benefits of a quick dip

Published

on

10 minutes of swimming might not sound worth it – but I tried it for 2 weeks and found the benefits of a quick dip

The concept of ‘exercise snacking’ has never been more popular. Not only is it convenient and accessible, but there is solid scientific evidence that short bursts of physical activity can yield real benefits for our health. But can a swimming workout be an effective ‘exercise snack’?

A study published in the European Heart Journal found that just 15 to 20 minutes of vigorous physical activity a week (almost as low as two minutes a day) was enough to significantly lower the risk of heart disease, cancer and early death. The study defined vigorous activity as any exercise that leaves you out of breath and raises your heart rate, including swimming.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending