logo
#

Latest news with #TheMethod

The Tracy Anderson Way
The Tracy Anderson Way

Atlantic

time12-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Atlantic

The Tracy Anderson Way

Each day, thousands of women, myself included, engage in a ritual. We flail our arms like orchestra conductors. We wiggle our rib cages. We get down on all fours and raise our knees to our ears. We roll on the floor. For up to 90 minutes, gathered together at studios or in front of our laptops, we perform The Method. We 'do Tracy Anderson.' The workout is not Pilates. It includes dance cardio, but it is not dance cardio. Though some moves are inspired by ballet, it is not the Bar Method. Anderson, who rose to fame training celebrities such as Gwyneth Paltrow and Madonna, does not wish to be referred to as a trainer. She describes herself as a 'self-made scholar' and an artist who has created a 'canon of work.' The movements, she told me, are a combination of choreography ('being creative with the biomechanics of what's possible in our body') and science (understanding movement from 'a body and energy perspective'). Wander around the Hamptons or Tribeca and you might notice solitary men in T-shirts explaining their solitude: MY WIFE IS AT TRACY. Ordinary people like me can do prerecorded workouts online for $90 a month, but membership at one of Anderson's studios is a status symbol, the fitness equivalent of waterfront property. Her empire includes eight locations: in Manhattan (one in Tribeca and one in Midtown), the Hamptons (one in Water Mill and one in Sag Harbor), Los Angeles (one in Studio City and one in Santa Monica), and Madrid. Her newest studio is in Bozeman, Montana. Studio membership costs upwards of $10,000 a year. Many clients spend far more, opting for private sessions designed by the Prescription Team. If you want to train with Anderson in person, you can book a spot during 'Vitality Week' (actually a long weekend) for $5,000. I know one woman—a successful entrepreneur married to an even more successful financier—who budgets $36,000 a year for her Tracy Anderson body. (For the record: She looks amazing.) In addition to legions of rich wives and women who work in the beauty and fashion industries, fans of The Method include celebrities and entrepreneurs: Tracee Ellis Ross, Jennifer Lopez, the power Realtor Claudia Saez-Fromm, the New York City political lobbyist Suri Kasirer. When the cash-strapped developer Brandon Miller committed suicide last year, many blamed it on the pressure that he and his wife felt to keep up with their Hamptons neighbors. She did Tracy Anderson every morning. I've heard rumors of powerful women threatening to blacklist people from joining the studio. I've heard that byzantine rules govern the hierarchy of spots near the front of the class. For years, the tabloids have been full of stories about feuds between Anderson and former trainers she believes stole her moves. She built an empire on the perception that she was a glamorous fitness doll, and now she doesn't want to be perceived as a glamorous fitness doll. She wants to be taken seriously. Xochitl Gonzalez: In the age of Ozempic, what's the point of working out? Anderson's goal is to transform how people think about the mind and the body, and to prove that her workout is her own intellectual property, both an art and a science. She's created 'thousands' of moves, she told me, and 'done actual studies.' She compared herself to Leonardo da Vinci, who, just like her, 'used his scientific knowledge to enhance his art.' Tracy Anderson devotees can buy clothes in her workout line, or her exact ankle weights, or Tracy Anderson magazine, which includes testimonials from famous studio members, plant-based recipes created by a team of chefs, and photos of Anderson modeling thousand-dollar designer sweaters over workout gear. Her Instagram features slick videos of Tracy Anderson, the trainer, performing Tracy Anderson, The Method, while wearing Tracy Anderson, the brand. Yet there is very little of Tracy Anderson, the person, available. She existed for me—as she does for so many others—in her workout videos as a silent body in motion, upon which we could project our feelings about our own bodies. And then, one day last November, I came face-to-face with her. This was no ordinary celebrity sighting. For years, I'd been emulating this woman's every move. When she wiggled, I wiggled. When she shook her hips, I shook my hips. When she went into a full split and rolled backwards onto the floor before scissoring her legs in the air, I … waited for the next exercise. Anderson greeted me at the door of her house in Brentwood, California, followed by a pack of beautiful dogs, including a cavapoo, standard poodles, and another breed I couldn't place. It turned out to be the product of the male cavapoo and a female poodle that had fallen 'madly in love,' according to Anderson. When they 'anatomically could not express themselves to their fullest ability,' Anderson asked science to step in. 'They deserve to be helped because they were trying so hard to procreate that his, like, his male parts were bleeding.' The poodle was artificially inseminated, and they went on to have eight puppies. Her way of speaking—warm and Midwest-earnest—makes even something as outrageous as doggy IVF seem like a gesture of compassion. In that moment, all I felt was happiness for those dogs. Shouldn't we all be able to express our love? Anderson grew up on a small ranch in Noblesville, Indiana, surrounded by goats, geese, and turkeys. Her mother ran a dance studio. Her father worked in his family's furniture business, but was also a poet and chess enthusiast. Anderson described the household as 'sometimes middle-class, sometimes not.' One day she'd be told she could buy new school clothes; the next, she'd be told the family was out of money and she'd have to return them. Her parents had dueling ambitions for their daughter. Because she was good at chess, her father imagined her as a future lawyer. But because she excelled at dance, her mother imagined her on Broadway. For a time, her mother's plan won out. At 18, she moved to New York to study at the American Musical and Dramatic Academy. It was the early '90s. She found a job at the Gap and lived on $5 ATM withdrawals and H&H bagels with mustard and tomato because she couldn't afford turkey. Just 5 feet tall, Anderson didn't have the 'dancer's body' she was told she needed. She dieted, considered taking up smoking, and eventually, demoralized, left school. She got engaged to the former NBA player and Hoosier legend Eric Anderson, whom she had met while playing a cheerleader in the movie Blue Chips. In a few years, they were married; living in Indiana with their son, Sam; and running a facility for youth sports and dance. They were young and inexperienced, and fell behind on rent and closed the facility. They opened a Pilates studio, then closed that too. In February 2005, judges ordered the Andersons to pay $334,375 in unpaid bills. In April, they filed for bankruptcy. But Anderson also co-owned another studio that had a branch in Los Angeles, and she was developing her theories around fitness. She had long been fascinated by Olympians, such as swimmers and gymnasts, whose physiques were shaped by the repetitive motions of their sports, and wondered if she could design a series of movements to shape the dancer's body that had long evaded her. After what she describes as a period of research and study, she came up with a program to strengthen the major muscle groups while working smaller 'accessory' muscles through a series of repetitive rotations and movements. In L.A., she introduced clients to a piece of modified Pilates equipment she called the Hybrid Body Reformer. One of these clients happened to be the wife of Gwyneth Paltrow's agent at the time, Anderson told me. Paltrow, who'd recently had a baby, complimented the woman on her body. When Anderson tells her own story, this is usually where she begins. Anderson has been famous since 2008. That year, in London, paparazzi photographed her with Madonna and Paltrow, both in sweaty workout gear. Suddenly, she was not just a trainer to the stars but the trainer to the stars. These were the glory days of celebrity magazines and gossip blogs, and Anderson was ubiquitous, proselytizing about how to get butt or Gwyneth's … anything. 'I'm giving you Gwyneth's legs right now,' she told a beauty reporter during a workout. 'Trim and Trimmer!' a headline read. In 2008, Paltrow invested in Anderson's business. Anderson started planning another studio in New York and headed to London, to train and tour with Madonna. That same year, she and Eric divorced, and she released the Tracy Anderson Method: Mat Workout DVD, which laid out her fully developed theories for the first time. 'Genetically, we are all shaped differently, and we all have our own set of problem areas,' she says in the introduction. 'The good news is it's completely possible to reengineer your muscular structure any way you want': to get 'teeny tiny' arms and 'feminine' abs and thighs without 'bulking.' Central to the workout was silent instruction—she demonstrates the moves without speaking—and a near-torturous number of reps with very, very light weights. The celebrity-lifestyle-obsessed late aughts were an ideal environment for what Anderson was selling. Fixating on 'problem areas' was seen not as self-loathing, but as self-empowerment. Talking explicitly about working hard just to get skinny sounds awkward now that we live in an era that celebrates wellness and body positivity. Anderson seems to regret her role in the 2000s skinny-industrial complex, when she would tell people, 'Let's go; you can get teeny tiny!' But she said she had no choice: 'I had to contribute to it too, or else nobody would do my workout.' Besides, 'you can't change a culture before it's ready.' Now any one of Anderson's clients could be on Ozempic or Wegovy if she wanted to, and Anderson has to offer something beyond thinness. But although the way she talks about the moves has changed, the moves themselves have not. Clients go to her because they 'know that their body's going to look the best that it can look,' she told me. 'And they're not going to go anywhere else, because they know how smart I am.' Anderson is 50, a thrice-married mother of two. She doesn't like to talk about hard times, but she's definitely had them. Eric Anderson died in 2018 of a heart attack. 'He was such an incredible human being and he was such an incredible father,' she told me. She said she always thought they might end up back together someday. Having to tell Sam that his father was dead was 'the worst moment of my actual entire life.' Two years after Eric died, during the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, the father of Anderson's younger child, Penelope, died too, of a brain tumor. 'I did not have the relationship with Penny's dad that I had with Eric,' she told me. But she took Penelope to see him before he died, and thanked him for the gift of their daughter: 'Penny's part of both of us. And she's extraordinary.' When I pressed her to say more about what she'd learned from her experiences of loss, she told me she'd become 'very understanding of people's journeys'—even 'the people that steal from me.' She said she always asks herself, 'Gosh, what happened to them as a child? ' The fact that Anderson has experienced death and divorce, debt and failure, is one reason I was drawn to her. I could relate. I divorced as a young woman, and I ran a small business through the Great Recession, and I was sick to my stomach for years worrying about the possibility of bankruptcy. Starting a business, losing a business, starting a new one—this is what entrepreneurs do. I also knew from experience that if you've spent years fighting for your business's survival, you don't take kindly to anyone you see as stepping on your turf. I came to Tracy Anderson sometime in 2009 or 2010. My grandfather, who'd raised me, had just died, and I had been working frantically to save my company. In the process there had been a lot of stress eating and crying on my sofa, and the resulting weight gain created a new wave of sadness as I felt lost inside myself and my grief. I had seen Anderson in celebrity magazines and turned to one of her DVDs. The Method made me thinner. But it also made me feel incredible. The choreography was so unusual—and the work so intense—that it required my full concentration, which eased my anxiety and helped me feel present in my body. Unlike yoga, where you were constantly being instructed, or fitness classes, where you were being 'motivated,' Anderson didn't talk at all, something I found incredibly soothing. I have strayed over the years. I craved the dark, loud music of SoulCycle; I wanted to try running a marathon. I was making a TV show and was so sedentary, for so long, I developed sciatica and a slipped disk. But I've always come back to Tracy Anderson. ('Most of them always come back,' she told me.) Anderson herself interested me, but I was hardly a member of the #TAmily, as fans have branded themselves online. (The hashtag is shared, a bit awkwardly, by the Tamil diaspora.) You'll see gushing comments about how Anderson changes women's lives, or questions about what brand of sneakers she's wearing. 'What a gift to learn from you,' one fan wrote on Instagram. 'You talk to us like that beautiful sister that loves you so much and wants the very best for you,' wrote another. Anderson says she doesn't want to be a guru. Of the women who credit her with changing their lives, she said: 'No, no, no, no, no. You don't have me to thank; you have you to thank.' But in many ways, she encourages her clients' feelings of intimacy. Occasionally, she'll get on Zooms with dozens of studio members that are then preserved in a section of her website called 'Conversations.' Women ask Anderson for advice on their diets and workouts and lives, but for a lot of the time, Anderson simply listens. If her Instagram videos are slickly produced, these calls are remarkably DIY. And long. One call last year ran for five hours. Other aspects of the business remain frustratingly (or charmingly) mom-and-pop. Products—such as Kenko, four-pound minimalist weights made of Canadian maple—appear with great fanfare and then are rarely spoken of again. Members who pay (a lot!) to livestream classes often complain that they start late. Had someone forgotten to turn on the camera? Many of Anderson's peers have been bought out by wealthy corporations or private-equity firms. Barry's (formerly Barry's Bootcamp) was co-founded by Barry Jay in 1998 and is now owned by Princeton Equity Group, among others. SoulCycle was founded in 2006 by a spin instructor, Ruth Zukerman, and two of her clients before it was acquired by Equinox in 2011. Even CrossFit—known for its spartan gyms—was taken over by Berkshire Partners. 'To me, being bought someday by private equity is not in my—I don't even hold space for that,' Anderson told me. 'I've had people with their M.B.A.s mess up my business,' she said. 'Fancy educations—Wharton on there, Stanford on there, Harvard on there.' But they didn't have the right mindset, she said. Was she a control freak? ' I'll tell you what I was,' she replied. 'I was a wild fucking stallion.' Now she is married to Chris Asplundh, a scion of the Pennsylvania-based billion-dollar tree-trimming empire Asplundh Tree Expert. (Mehmet Oz is a relative through marriage; he used his in-laws' address for his voter registration before his failed bid for a Pennsylvania U.S. Senate seat.) Asplundh bought out Anderson's other investors. 'This is a family business now,' she told me. Anderson's employees describe themselves as a family, too. Steven Beltrani, the company's president, walked her down the aisle when she married Asplundh. Employees' Instagram accounts are full of loving posts about one another. But every family has its fissures. Megan Roup was hired to work for Anderson in 2011. Roup was a member of the #TAmily for six years—schooled in The Method and given access to training manuals and Anderson's celebrity contacts. All of these surely proved valuable when Roup left and opened the Sculpt Society, a mostly online fitness class. Roup quickly amassed many clients, some of whom—including the Victoria's Secret model Shanina Shaik—had formerly trained with Anderson. When the pandemic forced fitness online, more people found their way to Roup. Anyone familiar with Anderson would recognize many of her signature moves in Roup's workouts. Roup's website stated that she had 'seen something missing in the fitness industry,' and sought to fill this void. Anderson saw contractual violation and theft—and the latest in a long string of betrayals. For nearly as long as Anderson has been famous, she has worried about her former trainers stealing her moves and clients. For good reason. By 2014, so many Anderson apostates were operating in New York City alone that one blogger took the trouble to rate them according to their 'Level of Tracy-ness.' Anderson describes herself as 'low conflict.' But most anyone who does her workouts and listens to the chats she delivers after class will be familiar with her bitterness toward the 'rip-off trainers' who keep 'stealing' her work. The frustration, at times, sounds more like paranoia. Anderson didn't name names publicly, but the tabloids were happy to report on her scuffles: The Daily Mail, for example, quoted an anonymous source saying that Nicole Winhoffer, who launched a DVD collection with Madonna's backing, was 'overweight' before she started training with Anderson, and that she didn't 'understand the reasons behind the moves, just the motions.' In 2022, Anderson brought a lawsuit against Roup and her business through her parent company, Tracy Anderson Mind and Body, for breach of contract and copyright infringement, among other claims. Anderson attributed her new aggressiveness toward Roup to finding 'my voice,' and the wisdom she'd gained in her 40s. Also likely helpful was the cash infusion her new husband offered the business. But by bringing the case to court, Anderson has subjected her own workout to new scrutiny. When I set out to profile one of the most famous women in fitness, I never imagined I would have to learn so much about copyright law. Yet here we are. Copyright is designed to protect creative expression. Performance choreography is considered creative expression and has been protected by copyright law since the 1970s. Physical fitness is not. In their defense, Roup and her team relied on a copyright-infringement case brought against rival studios by Bikram Choudhury, the inventor of a series of yoga poses performed in a hot room. The court had dismissed Choudhury's case on the rationale that the poses involved were not creative art, but 'functional' movement. A federal judge in California tossed out Anderson's copyright claim for similar reasons. Anderson calls her program a 'method,' the judge pointed out, and methods are exempt from creative-copyright protection. In addition, he wrote, Anderson says her Method is the result of research and markets it as 'designed for the purpose of improving clients' fitness and health.' Functional movements, in other words, just like Choudhury's. Anderson ultimately settled with Roup on the breach-of-contract count for an undisclosed amount, but she is appealing the copyright decision. Amanda Barkin, an IP attorney at FKKS in New York who has been observing the case, told me that Anderson's accusations will be hard to prove. Roup is 'allegedly incorporating these choreography and other elements from The Method that she learned through, like, the confidential employee handbook,' Barkin told me, but those moves are also 'all over TikTok, so I don't know how confidential a lot of it is.' I wondered, when speaking with Barkin and reading the court summation, if I detected a whiff of dismissal. At the end of the day, these are just women's workouts—things of vanity—so what's the big deal? A male attorney, writing about the case on the FKKS blog in 2023, noted that although Anderson faced an uphill battle, at least she had the glutes for it. In a statement, Roup's lawyer, Nathaniel Bach, called Anderson's lawsuit 'ill-conceived and frivolous' and insisted that Roup had 'developed The Sculpt Society on her own.' But the judge's decision to toss out the copyright claim, he wrote, was 'a significant victory both for Megan and the whole fitness industry, as the Court's rulings reaffirm that no one can claim ownership over physical exercise or dance cardio.' Whether or not some of Roup's moves are based on Anderson's Method, the big question is if anyone can invent and own a fitness move in the first place. Evan Breed was a professional dancer for 10 years before she became one of Anderson's master trainers. She told me she could understand why Anderson would object to someone 'copying exactly the choreography of her dance cardio.' But that doesn't apply to the more basic movements—the arm workouts and the muscular-structure work done on the mat. Dancers like her—and like Anderson and Roup—'grew up doing those rib isolations, moving your ribs side to side, moving the hips side to side.' The arm exercises, she said, are essentially what you do while warming up for a ballet class. Anderson isolated the movements and shifted them down to a mat. But they did not come out of nowhere. Perhaps those Anderson accuses of theft feel they're only doing what she did herself, and continuing her practice of reinterpretation. Why, I wondered, did Anderson keep emphasizing her workout as a research-driven method, if that was exactly what was going to hurt her copyright case? Why did she insist on having it both ways? Maybe it was that original tension—between the Broadway chorus girl and the sharp attorney—playing out all over again. There's nothing particularly unusual about a trainer arguing that their program is more effective than others, but Anderson's emphasis on her own research is notable. She started out with insights, she said, but she wanted proof. And so, in 2001, she began what she frequently refers to as 'the study' or her 'clinical study,' gathering 'five years of quantitative and qualitative data from 150 women.' She recruited mothers who would drop their kids off at the Indiana youth center that she and Eric opened, along with other women, and provided them with choreography to shrink their problem areas. After the center shut down, she told me, she kept following up with the same women: For five years, every 10 days she would measure them in more than 28 different places and provide them with new moves. What she discovered in that process, she says, is the foundation of her Method. Anderson insists that clients are coming to her because of this research. And it's why she doesn't feel bad about charging so much for it. And yet the study is not, of course, an actual clinical study—it was not performed by independent researchers and was not submitted for peer review at an academic journal. When I followed up with Beltrani, the president, to ask if Anderson could share the data with me, he told me they were proprietary. Even so, Anderson argues that only the close-minded would ignore her findings because she's an outsider to the scientific establishment. What bothers her most is the idea that others are copying her moves without properly understanding the science. 'To create my life's work has taken so much research, so much focus, so many people believing in me financially. For me to be able to test, experiment, create, and do this, and for anybody, especially a woman, to come in, work for me, learn from me, leave, take me off their résumé, and steal from me?' Anderson's voice was full of passion as she called this 'morally bankrupt.' Although Anderson wouldn't send me any of her data, she said, when pressed, that they included records in notebooks and Polaroid shots. She also agreed to put me in touch with one of the women she'd trained in the early days of her career. Julie McComb is a mom and teacher with a bakery business in Westfield, Indiana, and she's remained friendly with Anderson ever since she started training with her in the mid-2000s. Back then, McComb was new to the area, and Anderson was Indiana famous. Chatting with her dentist during an appointment one day, McComb mentioned that she liked to work out. The dentist said, 'I have to tell you about this girl. She's amazing. She's fabulous. She's the best in the area.' She has 'this whole philosophy,' the dentist added, 'and she's done all this research.' 'I remember her lifting my shirt up,' McComb told me, and Anderson saying, ' 'Oh, we're going to take care of this, and we're going to do this, and we're going to shrink this in, and get this smaller,' and her hands were all over my body.' McComb started to laugh, she told me, because 'my problem areas were always—even when I was in high school—the sides of my hips. I said, 'Tracy, there's nothing we can do about this.' ' But Anderson made her personalized workout routines every couple of weeks, and she used a tape measure to track her progress, 'and Tracy literally took me from a size eight to a size zero.' When McComb became pregnant with her son, she did The Method all through the pregnancy. Anderson recommended her own ob-gyn. It was such an incredibly easy birth, in McComb's telling, that she looked up at the doctor, surprised that it was over already. 'He laughed,' she told me. 'And he says, 'Julie, that's because you've been working out with Tracy Anderson.' ' McComb had known that Anderson was gathering research but wasn't aware that the measurements she took from her were part of the 'study' she's been talking about ever since. But she didn't seem to mind. She told me she'd had a minor stroke and some surgeries for a heart arrhythmia a few years back, and had largely stopped exercising. She'd gotten back into The Method after that, but then dropped off again. She would have liked to do online workouts, but she and her family had moved into a smaller house and there wasn't enough space. She feels bad about gaining weight, she told me, but what she truly misses is how The Method made her feel, and 'the environment and the sisterhood that we all had when we were there.' She said, 'It was more than a workout.' For months leading up to my visit to Brentwood, Anderson had been promoting her latest product, HeartStones—a set of 2.8-pound beveled spheres beset with a circle of rose quartz that were meant to be lifted through a series of slow-burn, tai chi–like movements. They were made of iron, and they were going for $375. I could not imagine why even the most devoted of devotees would buy them. 'Sis you have lost your damn mind,' read one comment on Instagram. I hoped to ask Anderson about the HeartStones during our meeting. But first we talked about climate change, and inequality, and the reelection of Donald Trump. Anderson rarely discusses politics publicly. She knows that she serves women on both sides of the partisan divide. When she posted on Instagram about supporting Kamala Harris last fall, one angry user wrote on her website that Anderson had 'abused her position,' adding that she was supposed to be 'a trainer, not a guru.' But Anderson sees politics as a wellness issue. 'I cannot stand the hate. I cannot stand the division,' she told me. 'That is so unhealthy for us.' Over lunch (a vegan fried-green-tomato salad) she talked about 'how our nervous systems as women have been epigenetically so compromised' by living in a 'system that is so corrupt and unfair.' Then we had to pause: A package from Goop had been delivered in the mail. She went on to talk about how she had 'creatively unlocked' women and enabled them to learn to 'hear their bodies' and their 'nervous systems' so that, when a woman's husband asks, 'What's for dinner tonight, honey?' she can say: 'Fuck you. Get your own fucking dinner.' She also expressed a wish that she could make her workouts more accessible to 'people that are making a difference, like teachers, you know what I mean? Nurses, people who are underpaid and making a difference? They need it.' (She didn't offer any specifics, however, for how she might do this.) We talked, at last, about the HeartStones: She recommends that anyone who wants to lose weight start with the HeartStones, 'because they have to hear their body.' They have to stop hating their bodies, their metabolism, 'the fact that exercise might have been challenging for them.' If they hate themselves, they will 'always feel miserable. They will not feel better even if they're thinner.' It seemed like sound advice, though I still had no idea how the weights themselves were supposed to achieve these goals. I think she could tell I was skeptical. When it was time for me to leave, Anderson packed up some gluten-free chocolate cake that her chef had made and some flowers that had been on the table and—oh, also, why not throw these in?—a set of HeartStones from her personal stash. She asked her husband to walk me to my car, and it was only on the drive home that I realized I'd just accepted a gift of significant value from the subject of a profile—something forbidden by the ethical codes of journalism. I had to return the HeartStones! But this was Los Angeles; I was already on the 405—I couldn't just turn around. I decided that I would mail them back. But not before I tried them. I wanted to dismiss them as silly and frivolous and overpriced. They certainly didn't transform how I think about myself or my metabolism. But holding them had the soothing quality of a weighted blanket; the movements slowed my breathing and opened my chest and back. When friends came over, I would show them the HeartStones, tell them the price, watch them laugh, and then make them hold them. I'd show them a few movements. They'd mimic me mimicking Tracy. No one wanted to give them back. Including me: I forked over the money to keep my weights. Like much of what Anderson is selling, the HeartStones remain a mystery to me. If they have any grounding in science, I have no idea what it is. But they feel nice, and my arms look better. Anderson is still appealing the case against Roup, though when we spoke a few months ago, she expressed some doubts. She didn't really care about Roup, she told me; she cared about fighting a system that tries to 'narrow artists.' What if, she suggested, 'I want to make a Broadway show about what I'm doing?' Then she could copyright the products of her creative genius, and no one could rip off her moves anymore. .

Dubai: Celebrity hair stylist Rossano Ferretti on how he came up with The Method to cut locks
Dubai: Celebrity hair stylist Rossano Ferretti on how he came up with The Method to cut locks

Khaleej Times

time18-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Khaleej Times

Dubai: Celebrity hair stylist Rossano Ferretti on how he came up with The Method to cut locks

Rossano Ferretti knows the science and art of hair. That he has come to be known for haircuts that are — believe it or not — seen as works of architecture imbued with near-scientific precision is a testament to his craftsmanship. 'When I was a little boy, my teachers used to tell my parents that I ought to be an architect or a designer,' says Rossano, at his salon in Park Hyatt Dubai. 'I wanted to be an architect because I was very good in design. My teachers would tell my mother that I had hands that could practically design everything. But that was the time when my hands would bleed because of the excessive shampooing at my mother's salon.' Rossano came from a small village in Italy, and studying in Florence or Venice was 'like going to the moon'. His grandfather, who had been a barber wanted him to try his hand at hairdressing. So, he did the next best thing — he sent Rossano to London to study hairdressing. 'The hairstyles I had seen coming from that part of the world had elements of architecture. The first bob, for example, was also the first geometric haircut to come out of 'Swinging London'. I went there and learnt how to cut a bob in three days,' recalls Rossano. This was unprecedented, given that it would usually take someone a year to master it. 'I have since spent the rest of my life trying to destroy the geometrical method,' says Rossano. By this time, Rossano had come to realise he had a special talent. He was not wrong. Three years later, in 1979, Rossano would do his first catwalk, which opened the world of fashion for him. Rossano catapulted into popular imagination with 'The Method', a form of haircut that involves texturised scissors (patented by Ferretti) being employed to cut the hair in sync with its natural course. It honours the natural flow of hair, enhancing its texture and shape without rigid geometric structures ('This scissor is the only scissor that can texturise hair fibre without crunching it,' he says). The technique, performed only by artists trained by Rossano himself, uses custom-designed scissors, and creates a personalised, effortless look. Rooted in Italian craftsmanship, it allows hair to fall naturally, requiring minimal styling while maintaining elegance and sophistication. Stay up to date with the latest news. Follow KT on WhatsApp Channels. What I do in The Method is that my arms follow the hair fall and my arms and scissors become a prolongation of my hands. It does not matter whether your hair is curly, straight or wavy, this technique is bespoke to every individual" Rossano says when he started talking about the natural hair look and invisible haircut, everyone thought he was 'crazy'. In doing so, he also became an advocate for 'skinification' of hair before it became a trend. The logic was simple — hair needed to be cared for the same way we care for our skin. 'It's all about hair health,' he says. 'Haircare is the new skincare.' Coming back to 'The Method', Rossano says it was born in a moment of 'big happiness, big success but also great frustration'. 'It was quite successful, but I was never happy, because I was telling myself that everyone loves it, but they don't really see it for what it is. It was not about the scissor movement, it could not have been completely geometrical either. When you have wet hair, and you straighten it with a comb and then attempt to cut it, what happens is the hair takes a different form when it dries. It's a disaster. What I do in The Method is that my arms follow the hair fall and my arms and scissors become a prolongation of my hands. It does not matter whether your hair is curly, straight or wavy, this technique is bespoke to every individual. In that sense, The Method evolves every single time, depending on whose hair you cut,' says Rossano who's stopped implementing The Method himself and has instead trained his staff in it. Today, international A-listers like Kate Middleton, Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Lawrence, Anna Wintour, Dakota Johnson, Pippa Middleton, Sophie Windsor, Poppy Delevingne, Richard Gere, Al Pacino and others have been spotted at Rossano Ferreti's salons across the world. In fact, the hair maestro recalls the time when Pacino famously told the world press about visiting his salon. 'He had come to Rome to attend a film festival and then went back to New York. When asked what his best memory of Rome was, he mentioned visiting the salon. I've got to admit, it did feel quite nice.' It's not just the people who visit Rossano Ferretti salons, but the moment he truly discovers the person underneath that true magic happens. 'Consultation is the moment when everything actually comes together,' he says. 'That's the moment when a person actually opens up to you — tells you their story, their frustration, what they like, what they dislike, what their personal problems are.' Once the personality is revealed, a suitable style emerges. 'I think there is a lack of information about haircare. People don't really know what it means to have a haircare regimen. They know what it is like to have a skincare regimen, but not haircare. They buy products for price or marketing, not necessarily for quality. Longevity of hair is dependent on how you eat, how you move, how you think. Hair health is a consequence of all these things. If you have a high cholesterol or something, it won't help.' From his range of products to hairstyles, everything about the Rossano Ferretti brand speaks of luxury. The hair maestro maintains that luxury is an emotion. 'Think about it, you can buy a bag that costs $10 (Dh36). Then why do buy a bag that costs $45,000? You are actually buying an emotion, you are buying a moment. For me, it's all about experience. Life is about moments, and every single moment cannot be special. So that's where luxury comes in.' The irony is that despite the promises of the beauty industry, there are very few bright professionals who actually enter the haircare business. This is when Rossano speaks most passionately about the problems of the industry. 'I could write a book on it. It's devastating that today, you don't find people who are passionate about this business. People cannot imagine that a hairdresser can actually be a rich man. No father encourages his children to become a hairdresser because they think it is a poor man's profession. With a change in the mindset, you can actually give a profession to poor people.' As for his dreams of becoming an architect, Rossano says he has fulfilled it. 'I became the most famous architect in the history of haircare. I have created the most trendy looks of the past 40 years. I began with reading the person, and give them a haircut that matches their style, but it ended up becoming some form of trend.'

‘We've moved past aesthetics': why middle-aged women are outnumbering the gym bunnies
‘We've moved past aesthetics': why middle-aged women are outnumbering the gym bunnies

The Guardian

time01-03-2025

  • Lifestyle
  • The Guardian

‘We've moved past aesthetics': why middle-aged women are outnumbering the gym bunnies

Call it the revenge of the middle-class, middle-aged women. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. A recent report found that women aged between 40 and 50 are doing more exercise than women half their age. According to a UK study by Vitality, one in four women approaching perimenopausal age are doing exercise almost every day. By contrast, a fifth of those aged between 20 and 29 do anywhere near that. At The Method, a new fitness studio in west London, this rings true. 'Some of the women who come here are completely out of shape,' says its CEO, Katie Henderson. 'Perhaps they just had a baby, or are trying out exercise for the first time, but they're not always your typical gym bunnies – and a great deal of them are in their 50s and 60s.' The exercise studio is small, hot and bathed in a pink light. Standing at the front, an instructor called Julius shouts the word 'mobility' at a class of six women. It's not the first time the 45-year-old former dancer has used this word to motivate. Mobility is a key tenet of yoga, barre and pilates – and Julius's other job is teaching pilates to The Lion King cast to prevent injury. But among the high-end gymwear and rose-coloured weights, the word is unexpected. Fitness classes are generally seen as being for the young and lithe – not the middle-aged and immobile. 'It is about fitness, yes,' he says. 'But it's also about keeping up bone density, about building strength and about not getting hurt.' Across all ages, fitness is big business in the UK. From budget gyms such as PureGym and The Gym Group to pricier, class-focused clubs Barry's, SoulCycle and Frame, the entire industry is expected to reach £2.8bn this year. The Method is one of a new line of smaller specialised gyms – New York and LA are leading the way – attracting older women. There is no one method at The Method; rather the barre, pilates and yoga-based classes lean towards dance and having a good time, Henderson says. 'But they are also geared towards all ages.' Pvolve, a pilates-inspired fitness regime, is more about strength and conditioning. In effect an at-home, low-impact resistance workout, it launched five years ago, but since recently placing Jennifer Aniston front and centre of its campaign, it has blown up in the US and is gradually making its way to the UK. Using a numbered mat, a resistance band and exercise ball, it looks somewhere between Twister and a tax return. But it is marketed at the time-poor, and those who can't quite bear the idea of going down the gym for 'fear of judgment around physical ability or body image'. Capitalising on the success of the post-pandemic 'workout-from-home', classes are run online, the tantalising carrot being the menopausal-yet-honed body of Aniston, 56, who has claimed 'this changed her life'. Josh Davies, a personal trainer who trains the cast of Bridgerton, thinks the motivation for working out is changing. 'Five years ago it was about looking lean, but we've moved past aesthetics and I'd go as far as to call it a complete switch in mindset,' he says. Strength training is a 'huge focus, particularly of premenopausal, middle-aged women. It's not something people talked about until recently.' Most of his clients are over 40. But, while reformer is punishing, and yoga borders on philosophical, he thinks strength conditioning is as much about injury prevention as anything else, 'particularly when clients already exercise – or have either just returned to it after having a baby or haven't done it in a while'. Studies have shown that while strength-training-focused classes can help slow muscle mass and strength deterioration, older adults improve with a trainer. Late last year, Jane Fonda launched a four-part series of workouts for Supernatural, Meta Quest's virtual reality (VR) fitness platform, which focuses on strength training. 'When you're younger, working out is a choice,' she told Women's Health. 'When you're older, working out is an absolute necessity.' Exercise among the middle-aged has undergone a loose rebranding in the past few years. The NHS guidelines now recommend strengthening activities twice a week for adults up to the age of 64. Ranging from pushing a wheelbarrow to weights and pilates, solid advice about exercise has historically been difficult to separate from the pressure to diet or look slim, says Davies. The generational shift is partly about time, but – like many classes – are 'also because people can't afford a personal trainer under the age of 40,' he says. Classes at the Method also cost about £35 each. But when you reach a certain age, he says, mobility is the new priority.

London's toughest workouts: have you tried any of the most hardcore classes in the capital?
London's toughest workouts: have you tried any of the most hardcore classes in the capital?

Yahoo

time10-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

London's toughest workouts: have you tried any of the most hardcore classes in the capital?

London has some of the world's toughest classes on offer, with top trainers like Tracy Anderson (who has worked as PT to celebrities from Gwyneth Paltrow to Jennifer Lopez) opening up studios, and increasing boutique offerings, such as the soon-to-open The Method in Notting Hill. There's something for everyone from dance classes to strength training, tech-motivated score boards to military-inspired workouts. But don't forget: a tough session doesn't always have to complicated or fancy. Here are the ones we think are the most hardcore in the capital: FRAME has just launched three new 'HIGH ON HORMONES' super classes designed to complement your hormones (not something all gyms take into account). The sweatiest is Strong AF, which, as co-founder Pip Black says, is designed from when you're feeling 'a bit all over the place, lacking focus, hormonal, or perimenopausal.' She adds, 'you'll leave feeling pretty invincible - and smug about your fast progress.' A unique class that urges you to work with your body for max results. Tracy Anderson has trained celebrities from Gwyneth Paltrow to J. LO and Tracey Ellis Ross – and now has her first studio in the UK at SURRENNE in Belgravia featuring her muscle-quivering signature Tracy Anderson Method workouts, designed to minimises impact on joints, but burns triple the calories. This is an exclusive class: Membership is £10,000 a year, with an initial £5,000 joining fee. Rucking – walking or jogging with a weighted vest on - is one of the biggest fitness trends this year – as promoted by health podcasters including Peter Attia who notes its benefits for bone density, muscle mass as well as brain health. GYMBOX has taken it to the next level, with a class that combines pounding the streets with a pack on (progressing up to 10kg), as well as a sweaty session on the rig, at three of its London gyms. The aim, according to Hannah Curtis Nunn, Group Fitness Director at Gymbox, is that members will be inspired to 'take on the Three Peaks challenge and want to summit the three biggest mountains in the UK.' Lofty ambitions for you and your glutes. The Lagree Method, also known as the Megaformer Workout, is the most booked class in its native US with fans including Michelle Obama, Jennifer Aniston and Meghan Markle. It's a low-impact, high-intensity method that incorporates bodybuilding principles and moves on a reformer Pilates machines that tightens and tones supposedly in as little as 20-minutes – but don't think it's an easy option. You'll be left shaking – but hopefully with the arms of the former First Lady. Famous for pushing you to your fitness limits, Barry's is a high-intensity, and seriously demanding interval training (HIIT) workout that alternates between treadmill sprints and weight training with fit-mad celeb fans including David Beckham (who goes to the Euston branch, FYI). From this week they've just launched a collaboration between the functional mushroom brand DIRTEA and HERMOSA the protein powder to create an exclusive recovery shake. Try it, you'll need all the help you can get. A class doesn't have to be complicated or in a fancy studio to bring on a mega burn. Strength training at the east London studio E7 Movement takes place in its cosy railway arch - but be prepared to sweat – hard. Expect burpees, planks and weighted glute work to push you to the max. Torn between weights and sprinting? 1Rebel's Reshape class combines both. It inspires lovers and haters in equal measure – but no one denies that it is a HARD class, swapping between hardcore sprints (sometimes with a 'parachute' to increase resistance, sometimes up steep hills) and heavy weights sets. Expect to get stronger but also faster – excellent news for runners with a PB in mind. F45 is notorious for its fast and tough functional group training classes that focuses on improving strength, endurance, and overall fitness. The classes rotate between different exercises that work your full body, combining HIIT, circuit training, are typically split into 2-3 people teams, and last 45 minutes (hence the name). It's tech-driven: you see results in real time on a big screen to spur you on. If you're craving a night out without the booze or late bedtime, Kobox could scratch that itch: it blends high-intensity, authentic boxing with functional training in a nightclub atmosphere (think dark rooms and loud beats). The 50-minute sessions (and you'll feel every minute) alternate between learning its signature six-punch system along with functional exercises that build a boxer's strength, endurance, and agility. Trainers estimate you can burn up to 600 calories in a sweaty session. The Method is founded with positivity – not punishment – at its core. The luxe state of the art gym features classes which fuse techniques from the worlds of ballet, yoga, dance, HIIT and Pilates. But don't be fooled into thinking they're easy. Blast is a revolutionary full-body workout that strengthens the body – while dancing along to banging beats, meaning you leave feeling high on endorphins. You just have to wait until February 3 for its grand opening.

The Laugh Factory and Stapleview Connect to Elevate The Future of Comedy
The Laugh Factory and Stapleview Connect to Elevate The Future of Comedy

Yahoo

time08-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The Laugh Factory and Stapleview Connect to Elevate The Future of Comedy

The Laugh Factory, a comedy cornerstone on Sunset Boulevard for four decades, has partnered with digital production company Stapleview to produce "The Method," starring Joey venue, which launched careers of Eddie Murphy, George Lopez, Kathy Griffin, and Jim Carrey, still draws packed houses - as seen at their 7:45 p.m. show last Friday. Now, they're stepping into digital comedy through their collaboration with in 2022 by Sam Grey, Stapleview relaunched in fall 2024 with Grey and Daniel Lantsman at the helm. The company creates long-format internet sketch comedy shows for YouTube, TikTok, and venture has attracted notable investors including Kate Capshaw, Joe Drake, Guggenheim Brothers (GB) Media - led by Dillon Lawson-Johnson and Criswell Fiordalis - Nick Myer, Peter Schlessel, and Steven Spielberg. Meyer, Schlessel, Kristie Macosko Krieger, and Matt Lichtenberg serve on the advisory board."The Method," starring Joey Dardano and co-produced with The Laugh Factory, marks one of Stapleview's first releases since the relaunch. Dardano promoted the show during his set at the Factory last Friday. Jamie Masada, CEO and Owner of The Laugh Factory, said in a statement, "Working with Stapleview on 'The Method' was pure joy. Sam and Daniel have an incredible eye and bring a level of innovation and energy that's rare in comedy these days. They're not just creating content—they're redefining how we discover and engage with talent. I'm excited to continue working with them and build a future where digital-first comedy meets broader entertainment in groundbreaking ways."Stapleview's first partnership success came with "Important Things of Great Importance," co-produced with L.A. public radio station KCRW. The show's second season, hosted by Concordia Shawarma McGraw (Katherine Ellis), releases new episodes Wednesdays at 10 AM on company's influence extends beyond digital platforms - Jane Wickline, who gained recognition through Stapleview's TikTok comedy sketches, joined SNL's cast in September up with "The Method" and other Stapleview comedy shows on YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store