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June 10, 2020 - The Joe Rogan Experience
01:32:33
Joe Rogan Experience #1489 - Ronnie Coleman
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joe rogan
31:50
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ronnie coleman
57:44
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Speaker Time Text
joe rogan
Mr. Coleman!
ronnie coleman
What's going on?
joe rogan
Great to meet you, brother.
It's a real honor.
I mean, you are...
When I was really into bodybuilding and reading the magazines, I always said that you looked like a dude who they invented in a Marvel comic book to kill the Hulk.
That's what you looked like when you were in your prime, man.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I felt like I probably could, too, back in those days.
joe rogan
I mean, goddamn, you were freakishly huge.
It was crazy to see.
It was like, you know, I remember paying attention to bodybuilding from the beginning, like the Franco Colombo and Schwarzenegger days, to what you guys had become, you know, when you were in your...
You just redefined everything.
Everything was just so extreme.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, we were pretty tough back in the old days.
Everything was hard, you know.
The guys I was competing against were real good.
I just came out of nowhere because I got in bodybuilding real late.
Where I'm from, we didn't have it.
I didn't find out about it until I graduated college, went out to Texas, and started working for the police department.
joe rogan
How old were you at the time?
I was about 24. So that's when you started bodybuilding?
ronnie coleman
That's when I started.
But I've been working out, you know, since I was 12, 13. For sports?
Yeah, I was on the powerlifting team.
joe rogan
Oh, okay.
ronnie coleman
I did powerlifting in high school.
So I was on the piloting team.
I'm from Louisiana, a real small town.
A lot of the guys are kind of big like me, kind of strong like me.
A lot of people don't understand, but strength is something like a natural gift.
You can work on it and get better at it, but you also have to be gifted a little bit.
joe rogan
Have to have a nice base.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, you have to have a nice base and you have to have a little talent.
Yeah.
You know, like this guy, I think, I can't remember his name, but he deadlifted 1,100 pounds.
joe rogan
Oh, that Game of Thrones guy?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
The mountain?
ronnie coleman
That's a gift.
You know, that's talent.
Yeah, he's gifted.
Everybody can't do that.
I did 800 for a couple reps, but I don't think I can do 1,100.
joe rogan
That's a lot of weight.
ronnie coleman
That's a lot of weight.
joe rogan
He's an enormous human being, though.
That guy, that's a Viking right there.
ronnie coleman
You have to have a lot of weight to be able to pull a lot of weight like that, too.
joe rogan
In your career, you were known for lifting large amounts of weight, too.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like I was saying, I started powerlifting when I was in high school.
I had the gift of strength.
I was pretty strong in high school, all throughout my college days.
It was just something that I think I was kind of born with a little bit.
You don't just start lifting heavy weights like that all of a sudden.
Like I said, you have to have some kind of natural talent for it.
joe rogan
Well, there are some crazy photos of you during the Mr. Olympia days when you were a police officer.
Is that you?
Look at that.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that's me in the ninth grade on the left, and that's me winning the What happened to your arm on the left?
joe rogan
You got a cast on.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I broke my arm.
joe rogan
Did you fuck somebody up?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, no.
I was playing football, and I think I fell on my wrist or something and cracked it or something.
And that's me winning the Mr. Universe, turning pro in the middle.
And that's me winning the 99 Mr. Olympia.
For right there.
Wow.
joe rogan
Damn, you were big.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I was kind of big a little bit there.
joe rogan
A little bit?
ronnie coleman
Well, you know, I got a lot bigger than that.
That was my second Olympia.
I only weighed about 255 there.
joe rogan
What's the biggest you ever got?
ronnie coleman
I was 295, my seventh one.
So I put on a little bit more weight as I got on up there.
joe rogan
But is it one of those things where you just kind of have to keep up with everybody else and everybody just keeps getting bigger and bigger?
ronnie coleman
No, it was that thing, I was trying to distance myself from everybody else.
So I kept getting bigger and bigger so nobody would catch up with me.
And what a lot of people don't understand is, you see me big up there like that, but it took a long time for me to get there.
That didn't happen overnight.
I put on about 5 pounds of muscle, between 5 and 10 pounds of muscle a year.
And that came from all that heavy lifting, a lot of eating.
A lot of eating.
joe rogan
What was a standard meal for you?
ronnie coleman
I mean, it wasn't a lot to me, you know, but if somebody, you know, normally tried to eat it, it'd probably be a lot.
So I'd eat probably like a pound of chicken, grilled breast, you know, with half a cup of rice.
joe rogan
That was a normal meal?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that was normal.
joe rogan
And how many of those would you have a day?
ronnie coleman
I had about six meals a day.
You know, it's kind of hard to eat like that, you know, so I would have to wake up in the middle of the night to eat and go back to sleep.
joe rogan
Really?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Was that annoying?
ronnie coleman
No, no.
joe rogan
I would think that would be annoying.
You're tired and sleeping and got to wake up to eat?
ronnie coleman
No, you kind of get used to it.
When you eat like that, you're hungry every three hours.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, every two or three hours you're hungry.
Because I'm not eating a lot of fat.
It's lean.
I'm not eating a lot of carbs.
So it's a little bit of food at a time.
For me, it was.
joe rogan
And you would get down to what percent body fat?
ronnie coleman
I was.33.
joe rogan
0.33, what does that mean?
Is that less than 3%?
ronnie coleman
That's less than half a percent.
joe rogan
Oh, 0.33, like what?
ronnie coleman
0.33.
joe rogan
How does a human get that low?
ronnie coleman
I got to attribute it to my genetics.
joe rogan
But was it also like a trickle-down system?
Like off-season, say if you...
How many weeks would it take for you to get ready for Mr. Olympia?
10 to 12. 10 to 12. So at 12 weeks out...
How much body fat do you think you were carrying around then?
ronnie coleman
About 3%.
joe rogan
So 3 was a high?
ronnie coleman
That's the highest, yeah.
Jesus!
Would you get tired all the time?
I'm 330 pounds at that though.
joe rogan
Oh my god.
Would you get tired all the time with that little body fat?
unidentified
No, no, no.
ronnie coleman
I'm real good in fat.
joe rogan
That's good and fat.
3% body fat is good and fat.
That's hilarious.
Jamie, see if you can pull up a picture of him winning the 7th Mr. Olympia title when he was at his heaviest.
I want to see what that looks like.
ronnie coleman
I was pretty big at that one.
joe rogan
Yeah, you were big, man.
I remember looking at the magazines and shaking my head.
Today I would say, oh, that's Photoshopped.
They didn't have Photoshopped back then.
ronnie coleman
No, they didn't have it back then.
I was a little bit too big for that one.
They had me to come down a little bit for the next one.
joe rogan
Oh, really?
ronnie coleman
So I came down to like 275. So when you said they, coaches?
Some of the judges.
joe rogan
The judges?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
The judges were telling you you're too big?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's when you know you fucked up.
That's when you're getting crazy.
When the judges at Mr. Olympia are telling you, a guy who's won it multiple years in a row.
ronnie coleman
Seven years in a row, yeah.
joe rogan
They're telling you you're getting too big.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, getting too big.
joe rogan
Ronnie, take it down a notch.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
Because, you know, the guy next to me is only like 250, you know.
joe rogan
But why were they saying, you still looked amazing.
Like, why were they saying you were too big?
ronnie coleman
Because I was at the time.
It really was too big?
Yeah, for the standards back then, you know.
How do they define that, though?
joe rogan
It's really just taste, right?
Like, they look at it and they decide.
ronnie coleman
Subjective, yeah, in a way.
It's kind of subjective in a way.
joe rogan
What year was the seventh one?
unidentified
I think it was 05. Was it 05, Ryan?
ronnie coleman
No, that's the eighth one.
04 is number seven.
joe rogan
Yeah, there we go.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that's it right there.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
God, you were huge.
That does look like a guy who comes out of a lab to kill the Hulk.
You know, like some evil genius, like the Hulk is working for the Avengers.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So how do they make that conversation with you when they say, Ronnie, you're too big?
ronnie coleman
Well, they're just talking to my nutritionist.
You know, I have a nutritionist that did all my diets and all that kind of stuff for me.
So they probably just, you know, told him real nicely.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
Bring it down a notch.
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
I remember there's a photo of you when you were still on the police force and you were also, I don't know if you were Mr. Olympian when you were on the police force, were you?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, three times, yeah.
joe rogan
And then you eventually left the force?
unidentified
Yeah, uh-huh.
joe rogan
You were so big.
You're sitting there with the uniform on.
I'm like, there is no way that's a regular uniform.
ronnie coleman
No, it's not.
No, it's not a uniform.
Did you wear those shorts?
joe rogan
That can't be real.
Did you arrest people with those shorts on?
ronnie coleman
No, I made those shorts myself.
But we did wear shorts, though.
We did have shorts for the police department.
I think you see that picture right there.
I got on shorts in the briefing room, but they're not showing my legs right there.
joe rogan
Right there?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, right there.
I have on shorts if you...
That picture is actually...
Bigger than that, but you just can't see it.
joe rogan
Did that inspire other guys you worked with to start lifting, too?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, pretty much.
I imagine.
We had a gym at the station.
unidentified
Oh, really?
ronnie coleman
We had about four or five stations.
Every station has a gym.
We have a training center with a huge gym.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I started working out there when I first hired on.
I worked out with me and the chief and some other guys.
We all worked out together there for a while.
joe rogan
And this is in the beginning before you were gigantic?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, before I got real big.
You know, I had to start small.
Of course.
joe rogan
Everybody's a baby at one point in time.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
So I was 215 when I first started.
joe rogan
Now, when you first started, did you have this idea that one day, was this a dream?
ronnie coleman
No, no.
No.
I did it because the guy gave me a free membership to the gym.
I never had a dream.
I just wanted a free membership because I was poor back then.
I couldn't afford to pay for a gym membership because I just hired on there.
Coming from Domino's Pizza, where I had to eat pizza every day to survive because I didn't make that much money.
By the time I got the police department, I was still struggling.
And trying to get back on my feet and I couldn't afford a membership still.
joe rogan
And this is when you were 24?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I was 24. So you were just a big guy?
Yeah, I've been big and muscular my whole entire life.
joe rogan
But regular big, not like Mr. Olympia big.
ronnie coleman
Well, I would say put a picture up there that somebody took not too long ago.
When I first got into a sport of bodybuilding, I was doing security at a Mr. Olympia event.
And most of the people out in the audience thought that I should be on stage back then.
Really?
I didn't think so, you know, but they thought that.
I had 22, 23-inch arms back then.
I had those 22, 21, 22-inch arms in college.
joe rogan
How big were they when you were at your biggest?
ronnie coleman
24. 24. That's the biggest they got.
joe rogan
That's like a waist.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, some girl.
unidentified
Yeah, but like a runner.
joe rogan
Like Zach Bitter?
I bet Zach Bitter got a 24-inch waist.
ronnie coleman
Actually, my waist was like 29 when I first started.
joe rogan
Wow.
I remember Holyfield, when he was a heavyweight champion in the world, he had a 28-inch waist.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
That's crazy.
joe rogan
That's a V right there.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, crazy.
joe rogan
So you do this security for the Mr. Olympia event.
ronnie coleman
91, yeah.
joe rogan
Did that get the bug in your head?
ronnie coleman
No, no, no.
I never started thinking that.
joe rogan
How did it happen?
ronnie coleman
The first one in 98. So how do you enter it?
joe rogan
What makes you want to enter something like that?
ronnie coleman
Well, like I said, the guy said, if you compete, I give you a free membership to the gym.
joe rogan
Okay.
ronnie coleman
So I was just competing for a free membership to the gym because I worked full-time in the police department.
I had that job.
I had a couple of security jobs on the side.
So I didn't really need money from bodybuilding.
I had benefits and everything.
I didn't need money from bodybuilding.
joe rogan
So you were just doing it for a free membership?
ronnie coleman
I was just doing it for a free membership.
joe rogan
So you do it, and obviously people go, this guy's got real potential.
ronnie coleman
I guess they were saying that to themselves.
I never heard anybody say that.
joe rogan
So what did you do?
Like you just decided to keep going?
ronnie coleman
I just kept going for the free membership, yeah.
I'm not gonna give it up.
joe rogan
So competing just was about free memberships at one point in time.
When did it become serious?
ronnie coleman
When I won my first Olympia in 98. That's when it became, first Olympia?
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Do you know how many bodybuilders right now want to jump out of a building?
They're going to go right to the top floor and fucking leap out a window.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, but see, my dream was always to be a professional football player.
So I played football, junior high, high school, college, and all that kind of stuff.
When I didn't get drafted, I was like, okay, I got a degree so I can get a good job, you know, with an accounting degree.
And I graduated with honors and all that kind of stuff.
And I figured I'd just be an accountant and make good money there.
So I never had no dreams or aspirations of being a bodybuilder.
joe rogan
But you never were an accountant?
ronnie coleman
No, I never made it.
joe rogan
You never did?
ronnie coleman
I never got a job.
joe rogan
So you just got a job in the police department instead?
ronnie coleman
Uh-huh.
Yeah, exactly.
I tried for about two years.
joe rogan
To get an accountant job?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
I tried real hard.
I did it.
A million interviews to some of the biggest accounting firms in the world, in the United States anyway.
And nobody never hired me, so like two years later, okay, I'm done.
This ain't meant to be.
Ain't nothing happening here, you know.
That's two years.
And I always saw an ad for police officers when I got the newspaper every weekend.
And it was always a big ad, you know, so it stood out.
So I'm like, hmm, they hired and you don't need experience.
Because all the jobs I went on, you know, the interviews I went on, they always want you to have experience.
I'm like, well, if you don't hire me, you know, you have no experience.
So I'm like, well, just give up on this.
You know, just go give me a job where you don't have to have experience.
And like I said, the police officer ad was the thing that stood out the most.
And I'm like...
That's not like a job where I can have a lot of fun, you know?
joe rogan
I can't believe that you didn't really get serious until after you won Mr. Olympia.
That's hard to believe.
unidentified
Yeah, yeah.
ronnie coleman
Well, you gotta understand, you know, I never had any dreams Being a Mr. Olympia.
I never had any dreams of being a bodybuilder.
I only did it because the guy gave me a free membership to the gym.
joe rogan
But once you started getting going and you won Mr. Olympia and you realized, wow, I'm the best.
I gotta throw myself into this.
ronnie coleman
Exactly.
joe rogan
Because the way you worked out, man, I watched a video of you working out once and like just the intensity.
And thinking like, this guy's doing this for 12 weeks straight.
The intensity that you had in the gym.
There's a certain level, no matter what the sport is, champions have a certain level of focus and dedication.
And I remember watching that video and going, that's what a champion looks like.
That's what a champion looks like.
ronnie coleman
Well, you guys also realize that I started working out when I was 12. I kind of fell in love with it when I was 13. It just kind of became a hobby once I joined the powerlifting team.
So I enjoyed working out.
joe rogan
When you won the first Mr. Olympia, how old were you then?
34. Okay, so you had a solid eight years of lifting, you know, this is after you were on the force for a while.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
And I already had the base too, you know, being in high school on the powerlifting team.
joe rogan
Now, powerlifting and lifting heavy is always a very controversial thing amongst bodybuilders, right?
Because some bodybuilders never lifted as heavy as you did.
ronnie coleman
No, no.
joe rogan
What was your philosophy on that?
ronnie coleman
To each his own.
You know, I lifted heavy because that's what I like to do.
And that's what I was able to do.
Like I said, I just was kind of like, in a way, I was kind of gifted to be strong like that, you know.
And it was something that I always was.
Even when I was in high school, I was benching about 350. Wow.
Almost four.
In high school.
I was squatting five, over five, in high school.
joe rogan
So that's just always something that's been a part of you.
ronnie coleman
Yes, always something that's been a part of me.
joe rogan
Now, when bodybuilders work out, for the most part, it's a lot of high reps with weight that's not in the center.
How would you do it?
ronnie coleman
I did the same way.
I started out at 20 reps, warming up, and then 15 reps, then 12, 10, something like that, on my last and heavier set.
joe rogan
So you still were doing a fairly large number of repetitions.
ronnie coleman
Still doing a fairly large number of repetitions.
joe rogan
But much higher weight than a lot of folks were.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, so when I went up, I squatted, I went up to like 600. I would do like, you know, 12 to 15 reps with that.
And benching, I would go up to like 400. 12 to 15 reps with that.
joe rogan
That's a tremendous amount of weight.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It sounds like it.
Yeah.
Until you go up against some of these guys that are doing crazy amounts of weights.
joe rogan
Now, you've also, since then, you've had a bunch of surgeries.
ronnie coleman
Thirteen so far.
joe rogan
And what started that off?
ronnie coleman
Well, I kind of hurt my back in high school when I was powerlifting.
And then I hurt it again in college when I was playing football.
Hurt my back and neck.
I did chiropractic for a long time.
And then one day in the gym, I heard it like in 96, I kind of herniated the disc.
And I guess it just got worse over time.
joe rogan
So when you herniated that disc, what did you do to treat it?
ronnie coleman
Nothing, nothing.
I'm a chiropractor.
joe rogan
Chiropractor, yeah.
ronnie coleman
I've been doing chiropractic all my life.
So I didn't have a surgery or nothing like that when I herniated that disc.
They offered me to have surgery.
joe rogan
So the surgery they wanted to do was probably trim the disc down because it was pushing against the nerve?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, laminectomy, whatever they call it.
joe rogan
Yeah, and so 13 of those, huh?
Now 13 surgeries.
ronnie coleman
Eight back, two or three hip, two or three neck.
joe rogan
And did this all happen all at once, where it felt like everything was falling apart?
Or was it like you get a surgery, and then you're better for a little while, and then you hurt something else?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, something like that.
Because the first one was back, the second one was back, and then I think the third one was neck.
And then back and back and hip.
Back, back, back, hip.
joe rogan
And what did you get done to your hips?
Did you get your hips replaced?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, both of them.
And like, what was that?
14, I think?
Yeah, 14. And how are those now?
I just had a hip surgery in January.
It's holding up a little bit better now.
One kind of went bad.
Sock is broke.
joe rogan
Ugh.
ronnie coleman
And I had to replace both of them.
joe rogan
They say they only last a certain amount of years, right?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Every night I had the titanium ones and the titanium are the hardest ones because they're rough and they're titanium and they're kind of hard on the body.
joe rogan
Oh yeah?
ronnie coleman
And because of that, you know, and me working out and all this kind of stuff, it kind of just broke the sockets.
joe rogan
Well, I follow you on Instagram, and I watch your workouts, and it's inspiring that after all this, you still love working out.
ronnie coleman
Yes.
joe rogan
You can really tell.
I mean, you enjoy it.
ronnie coleman
Still a hobby.
Look forward to it every day.
joe rogan
Does it give you any pause at all, knowing that you've been through all these surgeries?
ronnie coleman
No.
joe rogan
No?
ronnie coleman
You know, when you're doing something that you truly love, enjoy, and doing, that's what you look forward to doing all the time.
Regardless of how you feel.
Of course, I'm still in pain and all that kind of stuff.
joe rogan
Are you in pain all the time?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, but as long as I'm doing what I love doing, I'm okay.
You take that away, then I probably won't be okay.
joe rogan
So just even sitting here right now, you're in pain?
ronnie coleman
Just a minimum amount.
It's nothing major.
If you're an athlete...
You're in pain all your life.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
I can remember in high school and college, I was in pain some days.
joe rogan
All the time.
ronnie coleman
All the time, yeah.
After a while, you kind of get used to it and it doesn't really bother you.
joe rogan
That's why I'm imagining that you have a spectacular tolerance for pain.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I have a high tolerance.
I remember when I herniated my disc, I finished my workout.
I was squatting 600. I remember like it was yesterday.
I was coming up on rep number 8. And all of a sudden, it was a loud gunshot time.
You know, I do 600 for like 12, 13 reps all the time.
This time I took a couple weeks off and I thought I was still as strong as I was, you know, when I took the time off, but I wasn't.
I lost a little strength.
And that's why that disc snapped on me like that.
I heard it and I felt it, but, you know, the athlete in you was like, you know, let's go on, let's finish this up.
So I finished up, you know, I did leg press and some other exercises and Every time after I finished working out doing legs, I always had a real bad pain in my back.
Every single time.
But it would always go away in like an hour.
This day it didn't.
And I just went home, ate, put on my uniform, was headed to work.
And I'm like, wait a minute, my back is still hurting.
It's almost two hours later.
Something's wrong.
I ain't going to work today.
I'm going to the emergency room.
Oh, wow.
It was that bad.
Yeah, it was that bad.
Yeah.
joe rogan
And so you went to the emergency room.
They're probably like, what the fuck are you doing the size of this guy?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, like, we don't see nothing wrong with your back.
joe rogan
They probably couldn't get to it.
ronnie coleman
Well, they did x-ray.
They did x-ray, and they like, we don't see anything.
So that's when I had an MRI a couple days later and found out it was honey-eating.
Mm-hmm.
So I stayed at home for a couple weeks and sat on the couch and didn't do anything.
And two weeks later, I went back to the gym.
First exercise was squats.
Oh, my God.
joe rogan
Did it hurt again?
ronnie coleman
No, no, no.
I was getting ready for a show.
joe rogan
So it was okay?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, it was okay.
joe rogan
Two weeks after you herniated your disc, you're doing squats again?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
With how much weight?
ronnie coleman
I only did 300. Oh, only 300. Yeah.
That's the most I could do for 10 reps, you know.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
10 to 12 reps, so I'm like, okay, that's good enough, you know.
joe rogan
But you knew that something was wrong.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I couldn't do 600 no more, you know.
joe rogan
So after that, how long before you got your first surgery?
ronnie coleman
Ten years later.
joe rogan
Ten years?
ronnie coleman
Ten years later.
joe rogan
So it was just intolerable pain?
Like what was going on?
ronnie coleman
I couldn't walk like no more than like 25 feet without my leg being on fire.
unidentified
Oh, wow.
ronnie coleman
My feet being on fire.
And a whole lot of pain.
Wow.
So I knew it's time to get something serious done here now.
joe rogan
So what was the first?
Did they fuse it?
ronnie coleman
Lemonect me.
They shaved it off.
joe rogan
Okay, so that was the first one.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
I was good for a while.
I went back to squatting and everything.
joe rogan
While you're still Mr. Olympia?
ronnie coleman
No, you know, I retired.
I retired in 07, so I had my first surgery in 07. Okay, so this is after you retired.
Yeah.
joe rogan
You're not doing too bad, just in a little bit of pain.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
So how does it all go downhill from there?
ronnie coleman
I think maybe the second, about a year or so later, I started having problems again, being in pain again.
joe rogan
Same area?
ronnie coleman
Same area.
joe rogan
Were you squatting heavy still?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
600 pounds still?
That kind of stuff?
ronnie coleman
No, because I wasn't competing.
So I was probably doing about 400 or 500. Somewhere in there.
But you know, it's still kind of heavy.
Yeah.
And I didn't have the weight I used to have either.
You know, I wasn't 300 and some pounds or more.
So it was a little bit more difficult.
So it just kind of went bad on me again and I had to have another surgery.
joe rogan
Same kind of surgery?
They trim more off of it?
ronnie coleman
Actually, they did what you call like...
I forgot actually what they did.
It's been so long ago.
That was back in like...
Like 2008, 2009, somewhere in there.
They kind of like did a refresher.
I think they did trim a little bit more off it, though.
But, you know, it was all pretty much kind of like down here from there.
joe rogan
And so after that injury and that surgery, then how do you wind up with the other 11 surgeries?
ronnie coleman
Well, I think like the first time you herniated disc, It's like you stack a bunch of cans on top of each other, and you snap one out.
Well, after a while, the other ones are going to start falling out of place, too.
And that's kind of what happened.
You know, the others did start just herniating on their own.
Of course, I was working out, too.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
And I still have one now.
joe rogan
You got a herniated disc now?
unidentified
Mm-hmm.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
How many discs have you had operated on?
ronnie coleman
All of them.
joe rogan
All of them?
Every single disc?
ronnie coleman
Every single one.
joe rogan
So this one that you have a herniated disc on now, have you already had it operated on before?
ronnie coleman
No, this will be the first time.
This is the last one.
joe rogan
The last one.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
Wow.
joe rogan
And so what do they do with your back?
They basically fuse everything together now?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
So the whole spine is fused?
ronnie coleman
Yep.
Wow.
Neck and back.
joe rogan
How much mobility do you have?
ronnie coleman
I mean, I can still, you know...
Bend over and tie my shoe and do all that kind of stuff.
joe rogan
But your back is one solid piece?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
So there's no articulation of your discs in your spine?
ronnie coleman
No.
unidentified
Nothing?
ronnie coleman
Wow.
Nothing like that.
joe rogan
What does that feel like?
ronnie coleman
I mean, I guess it just feels kind of normal after a while.
You get used to it.
It happens over time, so it's like a gradual thing.
It's not all of a sudden.
So it's just like one day, you know, I used to be able to just bend over and do all these stretches, these crazy stretches.
Well, I can't do all that no more.
I can just bend over a little bit and do a minor stretch.
joe rogan
Now, are the doctors, are they confident that this is the last one?
I mean, you've got them all fused.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, it's always something, though.
When you're an athlete and you're always working out and always in the gym, it's going to always be something.
joe rogan
You just accept that?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
Get used to it after a while.
joe rogan
For a lot of people, that's a hard thing to accept, this idea that you're just going to keep smashing your body.
ronnie coleman
But that's just you.
Yeah, exactly.
I got used to it now.
It's been like, oh, seven, 13 years now.
Wow.
joe rogan
Now, are you in this wheelchair all the time?
ronnie coleman
No, no.
I don't have crutches.
It's just that I left them at home.
I can walk maybe about from here to that wall unassisted.
But, you know, after being up for so long, my legs get real weak.
joe rogan
And is it because of your back?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, because of my back.
joe rogan
Is it something that's like cutting off the nerves or something?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
Cutting off the nerves, yeah.
joe rogan
And is there anything they can do about that?
ronnie coleman
I mean, you know, maybe one day they'll come out with something that'll help get it stronger.
I was thinking about trying the stem cell thing.
Like I said, that should help a lot too, right there.
joe rogan
Well, there's a bunch of places that they do it where they could do it with a lot stronger stem cells than they could do in America.
A place in Colombia does it, and there's a place in Panama that I actually sent my mom.
My mom, they wanted to give her a knee replacement, and doctors, they want to operate right away, and I was like, let me see if we can send you down to Panama.
Let me see if Dr. Reardon, he'd been in here before with Mel Gibson, and he was talking about Mel Gibson's dad, and Mel Gibson's dad was in real bad shape when he was 92. And then now he's 100, and he's fine.
I mean, he's gone back there a bunch of times, keeps going back for stem cells.
Long story short, my mom was scheduled to get a knee replacement.
I sent her down to Panama, and six months later, it started to feel good.
Eight months later, no pain at all.
It really did a great...
And then I sent her down a second time.
It's pretty amazing stuff, what they can do.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
So that's my thing to do next.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
And people I talk to, they think it will do me a lot of good.
joe rogan
So is it there's scar tissue around the nerves that's pushing against the nerves now?
Because if all the discs are gone and everything's fused, what's irritating the nerves?
ronnie coleman
Scar tissue, all that hardware.
I got 14 screws, two cages.
I got two rods about this long in there too.
So it's a lot of hardware, a lot of cages.
What do the cages look like?
joe rogan
So it's a cage around your spine?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
What's the purpose of that?
ronnie coleman
I hold this together.
Keep them in place.
After a while, they don't want them to come loose, so they put cages around them.
Keep them together.
joe rogan
So you're like Robocop in there.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, pretty much.
So I got that in my neck and back.
joe rogan
You have a cage in your neck?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, uh-huh.
joe rogan
You got an x-ray of any of this shit?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I sure do.
joe rogan
Where is it at?
Is it online?
ronnie coleman
I have posted it a couple times online, yeah.
joe rogan
On your Instagram page?
unidentified
Yeah, uh-huh.
joe rogan
See if you can find any of that, Jamie.
That's crazy.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
You're just laughing about it.
Like, you're fine with it.
ronnie coleman
Well, you get used to it after one.
joe rogan
But is it also that you look at, like, you're a legitimate legend, and so do you look at it like, hey, this is the price that I paid to be a legend?
ronnie coleman
I look at it like, hey, I'm still alive and I can still work out every day.
I'm still normal, so I'm good.
joe rogan
Wow.
That's a great, healthy attitude, man.
You're obviously still huge.
You're still very strong.
ronnie coleman
Well, I'm not as strong as I used to be.
I'm not as big as I used to be either.
I'm only like 250 now, you know.
joe rogan
But when you say that, You're judging it on you being a multiple-time Mr. Olympia.
That's not a regular person saying, I'm not as big as I used to be.
Like, you can't stay that big.
It's not possible.
ronnie coleman
No, no, no way.
I can't eat like that no more.
joe rogan
I bet it's nice to just be able to eat when you want.
ronnie coleman
I don't eat half the food I used to eat.
joe rogan
I can only imagine.
ronnie coleman
I used to eat six.
I only eat three now.
joe rogan
That's a normal person.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
You got anything, Jamie?
ronnie coleman
Oh, that's going to be hard to find.
joe rogan
There it is.
Oh, my God.
That's crazy.
That's what a cage looks like?
unidentified
Uh-huh.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
That stuff's heavy-duty.
The size of those screws in that picture on the left.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, they're about...
Three inches long.
Two to three inches long.
And they got screws on the end of them.
Bolts on the end of them.
You can see on the end right here.
On that one.
Those are bolts right there.
Those are big screws in between there too.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that goes all the way up.
joe rogan
All the way up your whole back.
ronnie coleman
To my neck.
My neck is the same way.
unidentified
Wow.
ronnie coleman
Four, three, four, five and six.
joe rogan
And so in doing this, they've saved your back, but all the hardware is what's fucking with your nerves.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
All the hardware, yeah.
It's pinching on the nerves, causing pain and stuff.
joe rogan
And what does the doctor say about that stuff?
ronnie coleman
I ain't nothing they can do about that.
It's just going to be like that.
They say they can take your screws up maybe one day, but it's a major surgery to do that.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
You know, they got to cut me from all the way top to bottom and...
You know, take all those out.
There's 14 of them.
That started from the top all the way down to the bottom.
joe rogan
Would that be possible that if they did that it would alleviate some of the pinching on your nerves?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
joe rogan
Have you thought about it?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I just went to the doctor and talked to him about it last week.
joe rogan
Oh yeah, what does he say?
ronnie coleman
He said, I got another herniated disc.
joe rogan
Oh boy.
ronnie coleman
And they need to fix that before they think about taking it out.
joe rogan
And where's the one that's herniated, the new one that's herniated?
ronnie coleman
It's up top.
See, the lower ones are already fused.
Just the one on the top is the one that's herniated now.
joe rogan
Now, is it bulging or is it herniated?
ronnie coleman
He said herniated, so...
joe rogan
Pushing out.
I had a bulging disc that I had fixed with something called Regenikine.
Have you ever heard of Regenikine?
ronnie coleman
No.
joe rogan
They invented it down in Germany, and a lot of athletes like Kobe Bryant and Peyton Manning, they all went to Germany.
It's like this blood-spinning procedure.
unidentified
Have you heard of it?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I've heard of it.
joe rogan
They do it in America now.
They have an office in Dallas.
They have an office in Santa Monica.
And I went to the one in Santa Monica.
And they take your blood out.
They spin it, and they apply some medication to it.
And then it becomes this yellow serum, and then they inject the yellow serum directly into the area where the disc is.
And it alleviates all the inflammation, and the disc slowly goes back into place.
For me, within two weeks, I had extreme relief.
Within two weeks.
And then now there's no bulging disc at all.
I went back a couple...
After I did the full round of treatments, which I think was...
If I remember correctly, five or six different treatments.
I went back, I got a new MRI, and there's no bulge anymore.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that's sort of like what they do when they do PRP. Yes, it is like PRP. It's just more advanced.
It's just another level of PRP. They do the injection thing.
Did you do the PRP? Yeah, I did all that.
joe rogan
Did that help your neck at all?
ronnie coleman
No, it didn't do anything for me.
They did my neck and back, actually.
joe rogan
Well, I would wonder what would help you, like stem cells and...
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that's going to be pretty much the only thing that's going to help me, I think.
joe rogan
So all the stuff with your legs, though, that wasn't the case before the screws and before all the...
ronnie coleman
No, no, no.
joe rogan
Yeah, I would imagine that's what's going on, man.
It's all fused up, right?
It doesn't have to be screwed in, right?
ronnie coleman
No, no.
That's why I went to the doctor, because they said after about a couple years, everything would be fused up, and I could take the screws out.
joe rogan
So does the doctor want to operate on your neck as well?
ronnie coleman
No, he just fixed my neck a year ago.
joe rogan
But the new bulge?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, this is a new bulge in my back now.
joe rogan
Oh, it's in your back?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, this is in my back, yeah.
That's why, that was the result of a CAT scan I had done last week.
joe rogan
Damn, dude, you're at a hospital like every couple weeks?
ronnie coleman
No, it seems like it though, but I was just wanting to get the screws out because I'm, you know, it's been a long time and still in pain and like I said, still pinching me and still got, you know, nerves being pinched.
My legs are numb too.
My foot's totally numb.
I was thinking maybe if I took the screws out, I'd get some of this numbness to go away.
I'd get some strength back also.
joe rogan
Do you think you're going to wind up doing that?
ronnie coleman
If possible.
One day I would like to.
joe rogan
Man, I'm hoping someone hears this that's a specialist that has a solution for you.
How many different doctors have you seen?
ronnie coleman
One.
joe rogan
Just the one doctor?
ronnie coleman
Just the one.
joe rogan
Is that a local guy near you?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, a local guy.
In Fort Worth, Texas.
Also, my first surgery, probably like my fourth or fifth one, they operated on me for about 13 hours.
They cut me in the front, turned me over on the side, cut me on the side, And then they put me on my back and cut me on my back.
Jesus.
And that gave me a lot of problems.
That started the immobility thing right there.
joe rogan
And what was this surgery?
ronnie coleman
I was good until I did that surgery.
joe rogan
What kind of surgery was that?
Was it another fusion?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Why did they have to cut you in so many places?
ronnie coleman
Because they had to fuse so many discs.
Put in so many screws.
And that was in 15, I think.
Wow.
In 16, December 15, I remember getting off the plane in Russia.
In Russia?
Yeah.
joe rogan
You got that done in Russia?
ronnie coleman
No, no, I remember getting off the plane in Russia, and I'm like, man, my back is hurting.
And I was walking fine to the hotel.
The next day, my mobility got worse.
And the day after, I was on crushes.
And I've been on them ever since.
joe rogan
Just so out of nowhere?
ronnie coleman
Out of nowhere, yeah.
joe rogan
And how far out from the surgery was this?
ronnie coleman
The surgery was like the next month.
joe rogan
Oh, so this is before the surgery?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, this is before, yeah.
joe rogan
Okay, so then they cut you open the front, the side, the back, and then everything's downhill from there.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, everything went downhill from there.
joe rogan
Man, I'm really hoping that somebody listens to this and some doctor hears about this.
Well, one thing is you're in Fort Worth.
Dr. Reardon, his office is in Dallas.
That's pretty close to you.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that's very close to me.
joe rogan
I'd love to connect you to him and see if there's anything that he could do.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that would be nice.
Because I'm always looking to get better because these crutches are getting...
On my nerves.
joe rogan
I can only imagine.
ronnie coleman
After five years now.
joe rogan
And a guy who was the level of athlete that you were when you were in your prime.
unidentified
Exactly.
joe rogan
And how old are you now?
ronnie coleman
I just turned 56 two weeks ago.
You look great.
Well, I'm still working out every day and eating good.
joe rogan
Yeah, it would be nice if they could do something to turn this back around.
ronnie coleman
I like to get my strength back.
joe rogan
Yeah, I guarantee Dr. Reardon could probably help.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
I don't want to guarantee, but he's a real expert in, you know, stem cells and the benefits of stem cells.
ronnie coleman
Well, maybe I'll give him a call one day.
joe rogan
Yeah, I'll connect you two for sure.
So what's a normal day like for you these days?
ronnie coleman
Well, I got four kids at home.
Five, six, eight, nine.
joe rogan
So that keeps you busy.
ronnie coleman
That keeps me extremely busy.
I'm taking them to Burger King every day.
And I'm just riding around with them doing what I do.
If I go to the car wash, wash the car, they're with me.
I go to a friend's house with them.
They're with me.
joe rogan
And most of the time you're just walking on these crutches?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I'm always on the crutches.
So yeah, I hang out with them all day now.
That's my day.
Before, you know, I was on the road every other weekend, or every two weeks.
joe rogan
Seminars and things like that.
ronnie coleman
Seminars, you know, all that kind of stuff, appearances.
But since the virus, I've been hanging with them.
They've become my best friend.
joe rogan
Are you enjoying that?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
There's something that a lot of people have found some enjoyment from this, being locked at home.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, it's a lot of fun, yeah.
Yeah.
joe rogan
Because it forces you to take time off.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I got used to it now.
I got lazy.
Now I just want to stay home now.
joe rogan
Well, there's something nice about being home a lot.
I mean, I've only been on the road a couple times since this lockdown.
ronnie coleman
There's a lot of niceness about being home.
joe rogan
It's nice, yeah.
And the big thing for me that I found is health.
Like, you feel better because you're not traveling all the time.
ronnie coleman
Exactly.
Well, you know, I don't get sick, so...
joe rogan
You don't get sick ever?
ronnie coleman
No, no, never.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
No.
Wow.
I can remember like two or three days of my life I've been sick.
joe rogan
The way you said it was funny.
I don't get sick.
Like, you're not talking about I don't usually get sick.
Like, I don't get sick.
ronnie coleman
No, I don't really get sick.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
I don't get colds and flu and all that kind of stuff.
I've had like a stomach flu like two or three times in my life.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
That's about it.
joe rogan
But traveling on the road does wear you out though, right?
Like get a little run down.
ronnie coleman
You get used to it.
unidentified
Yeah?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, you get used to it.
joe rogan
Did you have any strategies to like beat jet lag or anything like that?
ronnie coleman
I didn't get jet lag after a while.
joe rogan
You don't get colds.
You didn't get jet lag.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, when I first started traveling, I used to get it.
But after a while, you don't get it anymore.
joe rogan
Did you just get used to it?
ronnie coleman
You just get used to it.
joe rogan
So when you would land somewhere, would you just immediately work out?
ronnie coleman
Go to the gym.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's the move, right?
ronnie coleman
I'd get off the plane and go to the gym.
joe rogan
That does reset you.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's my favorite thing to do.
I'd land in a hotel room.
I have it set up like, you know, after you eat, you brush your teeth.
When I land, I go to the gym.
That's what I do.
ronnie coleman
That's what I do.
joe rogan
Yeah.
That is one way.
It sucks.
Like, you're tired, you're worn out from travel, but if you can force yourself, you feel a lot better.
ronnie coleman
Well, I've made it to where I can sleep on the airplane.
And I sleep pretty good.
So by the time I get to where I'm going, you know, I'm all rested up.
I'm good to go.
joe rogan
Now, when you were competing, were you, I mean, you're eating all these meals a day.
Were you drinking a shitload of water, too?
Like, how much water are you drinking?
ronnie coleman
Like a shitload of water.
Like you said, I was drinking like two or three gallons a day.
joe rogan
Two or three gallons a day.
ronnie coleman
The gym I worked at, there's no AC, and it's 105, 110 sometimes.
joe rogan
Oh, it's in Fort Worth?
ronnie coleman
It's in Arlington, which is right next to Fort Worth.
joe rogan
That's hot as fuck.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
And then I worked for the police department.
I had this vest on all the time, so I was drenched every day after work.
So I'm always drinking water there.
So you have to drink a lot of water.
You have to.
joe rogan
As far as supplements and nutrition and vitamins and things along those lines, you were talking about what you ate, but what other stuff would you take?
ronnie coleman
I had a nutritionist, so he did my whole plan.
Some of the stuff I don't even remember.
But it was quite a bit of stuff.
joe rogan
Was it based on blood work?
Did you do your blood work?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I did blood work probably like three times a year.
He made sure I got plenty of vitamins and plenty of minerals and other things.
Because I didn't like vegetables, so he would kind of supplement vitamins and stuff for that.
joe rogan
You didn't eat vegetables at all?
ronnie coleman
At all.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
No.
joe rogan
Some people think you don't need them.
There's a whole...
ronnie coleman
That was me.
joe rogan
There's a bunch of people that are on what's called a carnivore diet.
Have you heard that?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that's me.
joe rogan
Yeah, there's a bunch of people that don't eat vegetables.
They basically mostly eat meat.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I would eat baked potato and...
Rice?
That was about it.
joe rogan
But why is it mostly chicken?
Why do bodybuilders mostly eat chicken?
Because it's so lean?
ronnie coleman
Lean, yeah.
Lean.
Chicken breast, you know, it's the leanest you can get pretty much.
I also had steak at least once a day, also.
Lean steak, you know, like filet mignon.
So I'd eat chicken three times a day, turkey also, and steak.
joe rogan
Now, when the competition was over and you won, did you pig out?
Did you go crazy?
ronnie coleman
I went crazy.
Every single time.
I started out at Pizza Hut.
I'd eat that first, and I had that in the room when I got back.
As soon as Pizza Hut was over, I went to McDonald's.
I pig out there.
And when we got left there, I went straight to Strip Club.
joe rogan
And pig out there?
ronnie coleman
And pig out there.
joe rogan
Now, how long would you do this before you get back to work?
ronnie coleman
Oh, just that night.
joe rogan
Just one night?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
And then back to the gym on Monday?
ronnie coleman
No, no, no.
I took three months off after that.
joe rogan
Oh, three months.
ronnie coleman
Really?
joe rogan
Three months with no lifting at all?
ronnie coleman
No lifting.
No nothing.
I ate what I wanted to eat.
I didn't work out.
I didn't do cardio.
Nothing.
joe rogan
Why did you take that much time off?
ronnie coleman
Because I felt I needed it.
unidentified
Really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
I was kind of like, you know, recharging the battery.
Because I knew once I started back, there wasn't going to be no, you know, Is it weird to make that transition from this crazy Spartan life of 12 weeks of just hardcore training to boom!
joe rogan
Shut it off.
ronnie coleman
No.
joe rogan
Three months.
ronnie coleman
No.
joe rogan
That was nice?
ronnie coleman
After that 12 weeks of hardcore training, you're looking for a break.
joe rogan
I would imagine.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
And you know, I had also worked out before that too.
So I take off.
See, the show's always in...
unidentified
September.
ronnie coleman
So it's like October, November, December, nothing.
And then January, start back up.
joe rogan
And then when you start back up?
ronnie coleman
Go all the way to September.
joe rogan
And when you would start back up, do you start back up full force, hardcore?
ronnie coleman
Start all over.
joe rogan
Start all over?
ronnie coleman
Start all over.
joe rogan
Wow.
So you just had it down to a science?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
You knew what to do and when to do it?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, because I hurt myself that one time.
Well, I didn't start all over.
So you learn from your mistakes.
joe rogan
That was when you hurt your back?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
When you stopped, when you retired for good?
Was that difficult to do?
Is it difficult to change your life?
ronnie coleman
That's still difficult to do.
joe rogan
Still?
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I miss working in the police department and competing.
unidentified
Both.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
I miss them tremendously.
joe rogan
Just because of the action?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah?
ronnie coleman
Mm-hmm.
Having a purpose, basically.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Obviously, this is a crazy time for the police.
ronnie coleman
Oh yeah, it wasn't like that when I was pleased.
joe rogan
Yeah.
What was it like?
ronnie coleman
Oh, it was much easier.
joe rogan
Well, where you were was probably a more relaxed place?
ronnie coleman
It was some crazy people.
joe rogan
Yeah?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
We had a lot of crazy people, actually.
A lot of crazy people.
I didn't know people were that crazy until you joined the force.
Yeah, we had what...
We started with 300-something thousand when I got there.
When I retired, it was about almost 600,000 people.
The city grew that big over, what, 15 years?
Yeah.
So I worked there over 15 years.
joe rogan
Well, we're in the middle of a crazy time when it comes to police and police brutality, and did you see a lot of that shit when you were on the job?
ronnie coleman
No.
joe rogan
No?
ronnie coleman
No, we didn't...
You didn't have to mistreat people back then, at least me.
And most of the guys I worked with, we were all professionals.
Everybody had to have a four-year degree.
The use of force was appropriately applied.
So I remember I got in trouble a couple times.
Well, one time I got in trouble.
I almost used too much force on the guy.
But I was vindicated and all I did was just bend his arm back Put handcuffs on him, but in the process of doing that, he got a bloody nose and a bloody mouth and arm ripped out of socket a little bit.
But, you know, you're just doing what you had to do to, you know.
Subdue him.
Yeah, subdue him, yeah.
So that was the only time that I really got, you know, used to force filed against me.
And I got a letter of commendation out of that.
Because I was a writer back in the day.
I used to write for the college newspaper.
And I was sports editor also.
So I was good at writing.
I could write real good.
And I could apply use of force techniques that they taught me in the academy.
So that report that I wrote on that use of force complaint, they used that report to train recruits.
joe rogan
Do you think that that's what's wrong with these abusive cops?
Do you think it's a lack of training?
Or do you think it's hiring the wrong people for the job?
What do you think it is?
ronnie coleman
Hiring the wrong people for the job.
That job is so stressful.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
I mean, you have to be real confident in your abilities to protect yourself.
And I was very, very confident.
I never had to even use my nightstick on anybody.
Well, you know, come on.
I went to, sometimes I would go to work looking for a fight.
And I was so bored, you know.
And it never happened.
Nobody never fought me.
joe rogan
What's the size of you, man?
ronnie coleman
And then, so all the guys that was half my size, I would just run to their fights.
joe rogan
Try to help them out?
ronnie coleman
Help them out, yeah.
Because nobody would ever fight me.
I'm like, oh man.
Still?
joe rogan
Still?
What do you mean still?
You're 300 pounds.
ronnie coleman
Well, that's when I was in my twos.
Oh, the 290. Yeah, 215 when I first got there.
joe rogan
Oh, okay.
ronnie coleman
220, 230, 240, 250. Yeah.
Now, of course, you know, the heavier I got, I didn't expect it then, but...
When I was in my twos, I thought, for sure, somebody.
But I had, like I said, I had 22-inch arms.
joe rogan
Right.
ronnie coleman
You know, I had those uniforms that were tailor-made, so my arms stuck out.
joe rogan
Do you think that, I mean, there's all this talk now of defunding the police.
I keep hearing this about defunding the police.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I've been hearing that too, but I don't know if I can't agree with that.
Because you need the police.
joe rogan
You need the police.
ronnie coleman
I agree.
You can't defund the police.
There are people that really need the police.
I never need it, but I went on a lot of calls where I needed to be there.
So I don't know if I really agree with that.
joe rogan
I think they've got to get rid of abusive cops.
ronnie coleman
That's what they've got to do.
They've got to get rid of the Bad apples.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
Once you get rid of the bad apples, then...
I think it's all good.
joe rogan
I try to explain to people when I talk about it, I'm like, you gotta understand that there's millions of interactions that people have with cops every day, and most of them are positive.
ronnie coleman
Most of them are positive.
joe rogan
If you get 100 people in a room, just 100 random people in a room, what are the odds that one of them is a fucking idiot?
It's pretty good, right?
Well, that's the same thing with cops.
I don't know how many millions of cops there are in this country.
I don't know what the number is, but...
You're going to have a certain amount of cops that should never have that job.
They're bullies, they're mean, they're sociopaths, they're undisciplined, they're abusive.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, they're not built for that job.
That job is not for everybody.
joe rogan
It takes a strong mind.
ronnie coleman
It takes a strong mind.
It takes a lot of heart.
joe rogan
And how many cops do you think are dealing with just crippling PTSD every day?
ronnie coleman
It all depends on where you are, I think.
joe rogan
Like New York City?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, like New York, L.A., you know.
joe rogan
Detroit?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
Chicago?
ronnie coleman
Chicago, yeah.
Places like that, yeah.
I can see it.
joe rogan
I was just reading a story about Chicago that over one weekend, 25 people were murdered.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
So we had about six, seven a year where I'm from.
joe rogan
That's a lot better number.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
They probably have six, seven a day.
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, 25 in a weekend is just crazy.
ronnie coleman
That's the craziest thing you ever hear.
joe rogan
Chicago's bad.
ronnie coleman
It's bad.
Unimaginable bad.
joe rogan
So if you're a cop and you're in an environment like that, you're essentially in a war zone.
ronnie coleman
Kind of.
Yeah.
I bet you don't look forward to going to work every day like I did when I worked.
joe rogan
Well, now today, people are so mad at cops that they just want to openly disrespect them and yell at them.
ronnie coleman
But some people know the good cops.
joe rogan
Yes.
Some people do, but some people use it as an excuse to say that all cops suck.
And, you know, that guy that, I don't remember his name, that guy that killed George Floyd, that guy is an example of everything that's wrong about police officers.
ronnie coleman
Everything that's wrong.
joe rogan
Everything that's wrong.
He'd been doing it a long time.
He'd been abusing people for a long time.
He had a bunch of complaints against him.
ronnie coleman
17 complaints is what I heard.
joe rogan
Yeah, but yet they kept him on.
ronnie coleman
Kept him on.
I don't think you could have more than like two or three where I'm from.
joe rogan
That's how it should be.
ronnie coleman
We don't have unions and all that kind of stuff either.
Once they fire you, you out of there.
A lot of guys got fired for bad reports.
One guy told me he got fired for not writing enough tickets.
joe rogan
That's fucked up.
What?
That doesn't make any sense to me because what if nobody speeds?
They say you have to write X amount of tickets per week.
What if everybody follows the rules?
ronnie coleman
That's the first time I ever heard that.
That's the first time.
I'm still kind of reluctant to believe that.
I should have asked somebody that was in higher power.
When I worked, they always told me, you need to write more tickets.
I'm like, okay.
So I go out and write a ticket.
I'll be done with it.
That's more tickets.
That's one more than I had on my last review.
So, but they never say, we're going to fire you, you know, if you're going to write a certain amount.
joe rogan
Maybe there's other things as well.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
But is it a different police department you worked for?
ronnie coleman
Arlington Police Department?
joe rogan
No, the guy, the other guy that you were talking about.
ronnie coleman
He worked for the same one.
That's why.
joe rogan
Maybe they were just trying to get rid of him.
ronnie coleman
It had to be.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
It was probably something he did, you know.
Because, you know, a couple guys I worked with, they got in trouble once.
And they're like, no more.
And you get in trouble again, they fire you.
Because they told you no more, you know.
They're real strict where I work, you know.
I think that's how they have to be.
You can't have no 17 complaints.
Two or three and you're out of there.
joe rogan
That makes sense.
ronnie coleman
You are out.
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, it's such a rough job to begin with.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, and I'm from a tourist town also.
You know, we got Six Flags, we got Cowboys, we got Rangers.
So you have to be good to the people there.
joe rogan
That makes sense.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
That should be the whole country.
ronnie coleman
You can't be mistreating people.
joe rogan
That should be the whole country.
I think cops should get paid more money.
They should be treated better.
They should be trained better.
ronnie coleman
We got paid a lot of money, but we're like the top five in the state.
Always.
joe rogan
Well, I mean, I feel like that's the only way you're going to get really good people for the job.
ronnie coleman
And you have to have a four-year degree.
You can't have, like, two years in a diploma.
You can't have 20 years of service in another department and come work there.
You have to have a four-year degree.
joe rogan
So they want people educated, respectful, do a good job.
ronnie coleman
That should be the whole country.
I totally agree.
But you know how many guys would get hired if it was like that?
joe rogan
Not as many.
ronnie coleman
Not as many, yeah.
joe rogan
But shouldn't that, I mean, I just feel like we're at a tipping point in this country.
ronnie coleman
I totally agree.
I mean, it's real sad that the people you call to help you hurt you.
joe rogan
Yeah, and all the time.
All the time.
ronnie coleman
That's a sad, sad environment to be in.
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, I feel like defunding is just going to make it worse.
ronnie coleman
Make it worse.
joe rogan
Yeah, and make these crime-ridden neighborhoods even more dangerous.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, you need police everywhere.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
Everywhere.
And like I said, defunding is just going to make it worse.
You have to have a lot of resources.
You have to have a lot of training.
joe rogan
Yes.
ronnie coleman
It's a lot of training.
You have to be training all the time.
All the time.
No matter how many years you've been there, you have to be trained up all the time.
joe rogan
Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
I mean, it sounds horrible for people to hear, but I think they needed more funding.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Even though the police are fucked up, they need more education.
ronnie coleman
They need more money.
joe rogan
More money, more training.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
And I feel like they should be trained the same way the military is trained.
And that way they weed out the weak people, too.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Weed out the people with the weak minds.
Weed out the bullies.
Weed out the sociopaths.
ronnie coleman
Yep.
But I guess it's just a hard job to get.
A not wanted job, I'll say.
joe rogan
Yeah, but I think there's also, in everything, every job there is, there's people that suck at it.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that's true.
joe rogan
And you can't suck at being a cop.
You know, you just...
ronnie coleman
You can't, but like I said, it's...
joe rogan
A lot of people do.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
And like I said, it's kind of hard to find good candidates sometimes.
joe rogan
Are you still in touch with all the guys in the force that you worked with?
ronnie coleman
No, all the guys I work with are retired.
Yeah, that was a while ago.
See, I started in 1989, so you gotta remember, that's what, 30-something years later?
So most of the guys retired, like, we had a 20-year retirement.
joe rogan
They must have really enjoyed having a guy like you as a cop on the forest.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I did a lot of recruiting trips for the police department.
So they told me, when I won the Olympia, the chief said, you don't have to come work if you don't want to.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
You could just get paid?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
If I don't come to work, I don't get paid.
joe rogan
Oh.
ronnie coleman
What the fuck is that?
I was making a million dollars a year being Mr. Olympia.
So I don't need $45,000 from the police department or $50,000, whatever they was paying me.
So sometimes I didn't go to work.
Like when I got ready for the Olympia, I didn't go to work.
joe rogan
So they just let you take time off?
unidentified
Mm-hmm.
joe rogan
And then after you'd win, you'd come back?
ronnie coleman
I'd go back to work, yeah.
joe rogan
Was it weird to go back to work?
ronnie coleman
No, no.
Yeah, I remember.
Did you ever get pulled up?
I loved that job.
joe rogan
I appreciate that you enjoyed that job.
But was there ever a time where you pull people over and they're like, holy shit, are you Ronnie Coleman?
ronnie coleman
Yep.
And that's why I quit pulling people over and writing tickets.
joe rogan
That's why?
Because of that?
What did they assign you to after that?
ronnie coleman
No, no.
I still worked patrol.
I just didn't pull people over.
joe rogan
Oh, I see.
ronnie coleman
You know, that's subjective.
That's something you want to do.
joe rogan
Oh, you make a decision.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
You can always just answer calls.
There's always a disturbance.
There's always an accident.
I mean, there's always a fight.
joe rogan
Did you ever see the TV show where Steven Seagal was a cop?
ronnie coleman
No, never.
I couldn't watch any cop shows out of being one.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
No, because that's what you do.
joe rogan
Right.
ronnie coleman
You don't want to see.
It's like something you do all the time.
You don't want to do it in your spare time.
joe rogan
I understand.
ronnie coleman
You're looking for other stuff to do.
joe rogan
Yeah.
It was a real funny show.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Steven Seagal was working as a real cop for a while.
ronnie coleman
I heard about it.
I heard about it.
joe rogan
It was the most ridiculous shit you've ever seen in your life.
unidentified
He would pull people over and I'm like, are you fucking Steven Seagal?
joe rogan
And, you know, it was real weird, man.
All of a sudden, I mean, he was in Louisiana, so he adopted this fake Louisiana accent, like real heavy.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, it's a lot of heavy accents there.
joe rogan
But he all of a sudden had one.
ronnie coleman
You can develop it from being around those people.
joe rogan
I can imagine, but it seemed like he was just adding it.
ronnie coleman
Well, you know, he's a professional, trained actor.
But he was a real cop.
joe rogan
He was really pulling people over.
The whole thing was so ridiculous.
ronnie coleman
I guess he was bored.
joe rogan
I think he was bored.
I think he was, you know, in between movies.
ronnie coleman
Well, you know, that job can be pretty exciting.
It can be really exciting.
Look at him.
joe rogan
I mean, you imagine you're a guy, and you're in your house, and maybe you're smoking some weed, and the cops break down the door, and it's fucking Steven Seagal holding you down.
ronnie coleman
Well, yeah, most of the guys, they're trying to get away, so they're not looking at the guy.
joe rogan
I understand, but I mean, why are you getting cuffed?
You've got to be looking up going, what the fuck are you doing here, man?
ronnie coleman
I have video, maybe arresting some people on video also.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I would do these videos, maybe with training, and sometimes I would have a guy just follow me.
The whole shift.
And he would film me the whole shift.
And I was able to put some of them on tape.
I had to get approval from the police department.
joe rogan
Did you put them on YouTube or something?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Oh, so they're out there right now?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, out there right now.
joe rogan
Did you learn any martial arts or anything from the police department?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, of course.
joe rogan
What'd you learn?
ronnie coleman
I mean, they just taught you basic stuff.
How to take people down, pressure points and all that kind of stuff.
You know, so...
It's probably not a martial art.
It's just takedown techniques and stuff like that.
Pressure point.
joe rogan
I would imagine a guy like you just grabbing a hold of someone.
They must have felt like they were made out of pillows.
ronnie coleman
You know what?
To be honest with you, I never had to really grab anybody.
joe rogan
That's amazing.
ronnie coleman
Nobody never wanted to fight me.
joe rogan
That's one good argument for being a huge person.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
It was real good and real bad.
Bad in the sense that, you know, I missed out on a lot of action.
Good in the sense that I missed out on a lot of action.
joe rogan
Bad and good at the same time, but you kind of itched for it a little bit.
ronnie coleman
I itched for it every single day.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
You got to remember, I played football for 15 years, and you used to, you know, action.
joe rogan
Contact.
ronnie coleman
Contact, yeah.
So you kind of missed that after a while.
You want to engage them a little bit.
But you can't violate rights.
joe rogan
Of course.
ronnie coleman
So, you know.
joe rogan
Well, that shows amazing restraint that you wanted to do it every day, but you never did it.
ronnie coleman
Never did it.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
Maybe they sensed that.
Maybe once or twice.
joe rogan
Maybe once or twice.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
But nothing serious.
ronnie coleman
Nothing serious, you know.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
I may have, you know...
You know, pull somebody's arm out of the socket or dislocate somebody's shoulder or something like that.
joe rogan
Just because they probably had weak joints.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There you are.
They said, well, yeah, they said some stuff.
joe rogan
Just imagine this dude walking into your house.
ronnie coleman
See, I got on shorts right there.
joe rogan
Look at the size of you!
Oh my God, you were so big.
That's so crazy.
ronnie coleman
315 pounds right there.
joe rogan
But it must have been so crazy for people.
ronnie coleman
2% body fat.
We had our body fat done at the police department.
And the highest ever I got was 3%.
joe rogan
And that was with calipers?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, it was calipers.
joe rogan
Did you ever do a dunk?
ronnie coleman
The one I had, the.33 was dipped underwater.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
It was negative numbers.
It was minus 2. That's so crazy.
Minus 2% body fat.
joe rogan
That doesn't even make sense.
Your arms are so big, it looks like you can barely pick your arm up to look at your wrist.
ronnie coleman
They're 23 right there.
unidentified
Almost 24. I just can't imagine.
ronnie coleman
See, they got shorts right there.
joe rogan
Yeah, there you go.
ronnie coleman
Those are the company-issued shorts, though.
unidentified
And they fit you?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
Everything was tailor-made.
The city has a tailor.
So I went to the city's tailor for all my clothes and all my vests and everything.
joe rogan
That's hilarious.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Did you keep any of that stuff?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I still got it.
joe rogan
That should be in like a bodybuilder slash policeman's hall of fame somewhere.
ronnie coleman
You know what?
They actually took my badge and put it on display at the station.
joe rogan
Oh, yeah?
Oh, that's cool.
Yeah, look at the size of you.
Does it freak you out when you see yourself that big?
ronnie coleman
You're like, wow!
No, you don't really see it after you've had it for so long.
But not looking at it now, I'm kind of missing it.
joe rogan
Do you?
ronnie coleman
Oh yeah.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
Oh yeah.
Too bad you can't stay like that forever.
joe rogan
Well, I'd imagine a lot of your identity gets tied into that.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
You hate getting old, but it happens to everybody.
Father time is undefeated.
joe rogan
It's old for sure, but it's also for you.
It's just the amount of destruction, all that hard training is done to your body.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
All the fun I had in the gym.
I had a lot of fun lifting all that heavy weight.
People ask me if I had any regrets.
Yeah, I have some regrets.
I didn't go heavy enough.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
There was one time I was squatting at 800, you know.
I thought it was going to be heavy, you know, because I deadlifted that already.
But I was squatting at this time and I didn't take into effect the gravity of the situation.
You know, when you're pulling from the floor, you know, gravity.
When you got it way up here on your shoulder, gravity's way down there, so that's pulling.
So when I went down for the first rep, I'm like, is this 800?
And I came back up, let me do another one.
It's still easy, but I had in my mind two, because I had already done two on the deadlift.
And I put it up, and I'm like, oh man, I could have did at least three or four more.
joe rogan
That bothers you to this day?
ronnie coleman
That bothers me to this day.
To this day.
But I went to the leg press and did 2,300 pounds on the leg press for eight reps.
joe rogan
How much?
ronnie coleman
2,300.
2,300 pounds.
For eight reps?
Eight reps, yeah.
That's on YouTube also.
joe rogan
That doesn't even make sense.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's a car.
ronnie coleman
You had to add it up with a calculator.
Yeah, I had to bring out a calculator to add it up.
Lift so much weight.
joe rogan
Why would you lift so much weight?
ronnie coleman
Because I could.
No other reason.
Look at this.
joe rogan
This is so ridiculous.
How many times have you done this before?
ronnie coleman
I did that one time.
joe rogan
What the fuck is that?
That's so crazy, man.
ronnie coleman
That's 2,300 pounds.
joe rogan
That is so crazy.
I saw a video of a girl trying to use one of those things and her knee bent backwards and snapped.
ronnie coleman
And see, I came all the way back.
Well, some people that put that on there, they didn't come that far back, you know.
So this is right after the 800 pound squat.
You gotta remember that.
So I'm a little tired.
I'm a little tired.
Not real tired.
joe rogan
That is insane.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
Back then it was.
I couldn't...
I can't do...
joe rogan
How many reps are you doing?
ronnie coleman
Eight.
I think I did eight.
joe rogan
That's very hard to believe.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's very hard to believe you've been looking at it.
Look at all those 45s.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
That's like 50-something plates.
50 of them.
joe rogan
That is bonkers, man.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
unidentified
That's bonkers.
ronnie coleman
I bought that machine specifically to do that.
Because a regular machine, you couldn't do that.
Because the first time I put it on there, that bar bent.
So he had to re-enforce the bar.
Ugh.
For, you know, so I could do it.
joe rogan
How are your knees right now?
ronnie coleman
My knees are perfect.
I wrapped up all the time.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, wrapped all the time when I went heavy.
joe rogan
That's crazy that the knees are okay.
ronnie coleman
No problem whatsoever.
joe rogan
And everything else is all banged up.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, just the back and neck.
Yep.
I miss those days.
joe rogan
Goddamn.
Now, what kind of steroids were dudes doing back then?
ronnie coleman
I mean, basic.
You know, you got, you know, your tests, D-ball.
It's just basic stuff, you know.
And back then, you know, because the DA had come in and, you know, was trying to find out what we were all doing, they made us do it legally.
So, you know, you had to go to the doctor and get all these prescriptions and And you would get prescriptions for steroids?
Yeah.
joe rogan
What kind of steroids would they give you a prescription for?
ronnie coleman
Like, any kind of test.
You need it.
They would get a growth hormone.
They'd get a prescription because once the DEA came in, they was like, what are y'all doing?
What are y'all taking?
joe rogan
But when you think, like, the DEA, shouldn't you be out there catching people selling meth?
Why are you going after bodybuilders who are also cops?
ronnie coleman
That seems ridiculous.
Because they had kids out there that were taking it and committing suicide.
See, I didn't know what that was when I was a kid.
joe rogan
They were committing suicide because they were getting depressed from the steroids or coming off of it?
ronnie coleman
Coming off of it.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
So they're trying to figure out, you know, what are y'all doing?
We got to get y'all off this stuff.
joe rogan
And so that's when you got a doctor that was willing to prescribe everything.
So was this while you were doing Mr. Olympian?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
So all that stuff was above board.
It was all legal.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
Everything was legal back then.
joe rogan
Is that the case now?
ronnie coleman
You know what?
That was just when the heat was on.
I don't think they got the heat on the guys like that now.
joe rogan
So the DEA would come to you and you would just say, hey, here's my prescriptions.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
And they would go, all right.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
One time, if you didn't have a prescription, they took your stuff.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
So they'd find whatever you had and take it from you.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
Hmm.
Yep.
joe rogan
How did they know where it was?
ronnie coleman
You told them.
joe rogan
Oh, okay.
Because otherwise they put you in jail.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
Search your house, you know, get a search warrant.
But I got this and this and this.
joe rogan
Well, I'd imagine you would have to take something to be as big as you were when you were at your peak.
ronnie coleman
Oh yeah, yeah, for sure.
joe rogan
It's not really possible to be that big without it.
ronnie coleman
Without it, no, no.
You can't get that big...
Another thing you gotta have too is genetics.
joe rogan
Yes.
ronnie coleman
You know, look at the baseball players that have taken stuff and look at us.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
They can't get that big.
They're not gifted for it.
joe rogan
Well, they didn't try either, right?
They weren't trying to get that big.
Guys like Kenseiko, he got pretty fucking big.
ronnie coleman
They couldn't get that big because they wanted to.
joe rogan
Really?
So it's a small percentage of the population that could get that big.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
And probably like 1% that could get as big as I got.
And I was the only guy.
Nobody duplicated that since.
And be in that condition.
joe rogan
Right.
ronnie coleman
And be healthy.
Right.
I don't have any health problems besides the back.
joe rogan
The injuries.
ronnie coleman
The injuries, yeah.
My liver, my kidneys, and my heart, it's all good.
joe rogan
Did you, while you were doing things, did you get frequent blood tests?
ronnie coleman
Every three to four months.
joe rogan
And the doctor would go over everything and make sure everything was fine.
ronnie coleman
Everything's always good.
joe rogan
That seems to be the big misconception about steroids is that people think steroids kill you.
ronnie coleman
And people think you're taking like tons of stuff.
I wasn't taking...
Tons of stuff.
I probably wasn't taking no more than what those baseball players were taking.
Just working out more, lifting more, lifting harder.
Working out, lifting more, and gifted genetically for it.
joe rogan
Dorian Yates said basically the same thing.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
It wasn't that he was taking a lot, not compared to a lot of guys.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
People think I was taking...
If I had been taking massive amounts of stuff, I don't think I'd still be here.
I don't think I'd be as healthy as I am now.
Besides my back surgery, neck surgeries, I'm all good.
Like I said, my liver and my kidneys and heart and everything is still holding up real good.
joe rogan
Now, when you would get off for that three-month period, would you cycle off of everything?
ronnie coleman
Cold turkey.
joe rogan
Cold turkey?
Really?
ronnie coleman
Cold turkey.
I didn't take anything or nothing.
joe rogan
And what did you feel like over those three months?
unidentified
Normal.
ronnie coleman
Really?
Normal.
It didn't bother me a bit.
joe rogan
So you just, you got just great genetics, man.
ronnie coleman
Craziest ever.
joe rogan
Yeah, I mean, obviously, there's no way you could take all, you know.
ronnie coleman
Cold turkey, I stopped everything.
One day, I'd be taking, you know, a bunch of stuff.
Next day, nothing.
joe rogan
And your body would just feel normal?
ronnie coleman
Body felt normal.
Didn't bother me a bit.
joe rogan
That's so crazy.
ronnie coleman
Didn't get depressed or nothing, you know.
Yeah.
Felt normal.
joe rogan
That's just genetics.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I still was strong.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
I could still, you know, squat, you know, I could squat, you know, 700-800 naturally.
joe rogan
Wow.
So you basically kept a lot of your gains.
ronnie coleman
Yep, I was still 300 pounds, you know.
Without taking all that stuff.
joe rogan
And so then, after three months, then you would slowly ramp back up?
ronnie coleman
Slowly ramp back up, yeah.
joe rogan
And all this under doctor supervision?
ronnie coleman
All this under doctor supervision.
And all the while I'm getting my blood work done.
Every three to four months.
joe rogan
So a lot of guys, after they're done competing, then they have to get on testosterone replacement therapy because the endocrine system is kind of messed up.
ronnie coleman
Exactly.
joe rogan
Did you have to do that as well?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
It seems like that's just a part of the sport, right?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
It is.
Yeah, it is.
joe rogan
It's interesting though because for the longest time these guys were doing these ads in magazines and they were attributing everything to some supplement that they were selling or some creatine or some this.
All that stuff does something.
ronnie coleman
It helps you out a little bit.
joe rogan
But it's not going to get you...
ronnie coleman
It's not going to get you 330 pounds with 3% body fat.
joe rogan
No.
ronnie coleman
No, it's definitely not going to do that.
joe rogan
Was that something that you were allowed to talk about while you were competing?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I mean...
joe rogan
Did it come up?
Yeah, yeah.
ronnie coleman
I talked about it.
I didn't have no reason to hide it.
joe rogan
People were not stupid.
When you got that big.
But it seemed like there was an era where bodybuilding kind of tried to pretend that they weren't taking it.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
Because of all those people committing suicide and kids taking all that stuff and doing it the wrong way, you know.
Not having it prescribed and all this kind of stuff.
joe rogan
Also, the more is better philosophy.
ronnie coleman
Black market getting bad stuff.
joe rogan
Right.
Yeah.
But there were some guys that would just say, well, the way to win is to take way more than everybody else.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
And see what your body could tolerate.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
The more you take, the better you're going to be.
joe rogan
I knew a guy like that.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
And he wound up having a heart attack.
ronnie coleman
Exactly.
joe rogan
We used to call them garden hoses because his arms looked like garden hoses for veins.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Just these giant veins all over his arms.
Didn't even make sense.
But he was just on everything.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah.
That he didn't make it to 30. Yeah.
ronnie coleman
He died before he was 30. Some people, yeah, they do it the wrong way.
I didn't start taking anything until I was 30. Really?
Yeah.
Remember, I was drug-free for a long time.
I did everything naturally for a long, long time because I was, like I said, gifted.
joe rogan
Right.
What inspired you?
What made you decide when you were 30 that you had to do something?
ronnie coleman
I got tired of getting my ass kicked.
joe rogan
In competitions?
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
The highs I would place was like third or something, you know.
After a while, you know, you're competitive.
You're shit.
The other guy's got a competitive advantage on you.
So let's make this thing equal.
joe rogan
Is this something somebody suggested to you?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
So people in the gym, like, hey, Ronnie.
ronnie coleman
No, one of the competitors suggested that to me.
joe rogan
Oh.
ronnie coleman
Guy by the name of Flex Wheeler.
joe rogan
Oh, okay.
ronnie coleman
My best friend in the world.
joe rogan
That guy was fucking huge.
ronnie coleman
Huge.
unidentified
Huge.
ronnie coleman
And he taught me everything I know.
joe rogan
Did he really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
unidentified
Mm-hmm.
ronnie coleman
He also got me the best nutritionist ever.
That's how I won my first Olympia.
joe rogan
So is that how most guys find out about steroids from other guys who are competing?
ronnie coleman
If you're smart, that's the way you would do it.
Somebody that knows what they're doing and somebody that's successful at it.
Not some dumb trainer that think they know.
Flex had won major contests and it was a Real experienced bodybuilder at the time.
I'm still new to the sport.
I didn't get into it until I was 24. I think he started probably when he was like 16, 17, somewhere in there.
I never did that kind of stuff because we didn't have it where I was from.
joe rogan
How much of a night and day difference was it once you started taking stuff?
ronnie coleman
As far as the condition...
Night and day.
joe rogan
Night and day and your ability to work?
To put in work?
ronnie coleman
No, no.
joe rogan
The condition of your body?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, the only thing that changed was conditioning.
My strength didn't go up that much.
joe rogan
What do you mean by conditioning?
The way you looked?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, the way I looked.
joe rogan
So like leanness?
ronnie coleman
My definition and, you know, leanness and kind of, that's the only thing that really changed.
joe rogan
Well, your strength didn't go up that much.
ronnie coleman
My strength didn't go up that much.
I was still, I was deadlifting 750 pounds.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
You know.
I was still doing powerlifting shows when I was doing bodybuilding.
unidentified
Were you really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
At the same time?
ronnie coleman
At the same time, yeah.
joe rogan
That's pretty unusual, isn't it?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
But, you know, that was something I loved to do.
joe rogan
But those powerlifting guys are usually quite a bit fatter.
They don't mind having a lot of body fat.
ronnie coleman
The more body fat you have, the stronger you're going to be.
joe rogan
Why is that?
ronnie coleman
Because you got more cushion around the muscle.
More water around the muscle.
And all that stuff makes you stronger, gives you more energy.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
Especially if you're naturally gifted with strength.
joe rogan
So did you ever feel like, was that ever pulling you back, like powerlifting?
Did you ever think about getting back into that again?
Or were you just completely committed to bodybuilding at that time?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, after a while, I kind of just got committed to bodybuilding.
Because I was working full-time in the police department, trying to do powerlifting, trying to do bodybuilding.
It was just too much.
And I had all these jobs, too.
I would do security at Denny's on Fridays and Saturday nights from 12 to 4. Oh, Jesus.
I would work in my apartment complex.
joe rogan
That might be the most dangerous spot in the world.
Denny's from 12 to 4 on the weekends?
ronnie coleman
My first fight was at Denny's.
joe rogan
Oh, was it really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, my first one.
The one that I got used to force complex filed against me was at Denny's.
joe rogan
Yeah, Denny's can be rough.
Late night, drunks, showing up to eat.
ronnie coleman
Yep.
unidentified
Oh, my God.
ronnie coleman
It was a drunk guy.
joe rogan
Of course.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
You want to try to resist me?
joe rogan
Who the fuck is sober at Denny's at 3 o'clock in the morning?
ronnie coleman
Exactly.
Hardly nobody.
joe rogan
So when you were 30, you started taking steroids and you won the Olympia for the first time when you were 34. So that's like four years.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
That's insane.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
But you got to remember the base I had before that.
joe rogan
Right.
It's base and hard work and also genetics.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
It's the perfect storm.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Do you think as a bodybuilder you really need like the perfect storm of things to be a champion?
ronnie coleman
You do.
Yeah, you do.
You're not going to be it if you don't have it.
It's just like trying to be president of the United States.
Only certain people are going to be president of the United States.
Everybody's not going to make it at that job.
joe rogan
Well, it's like when I look at some Mr. Olympias, it's so hard.
I'm looking at one, two, three, and four.
I'm like, I don't...
I'm not...
ronnie coleman
You have to have an eye for it.
You have to be trained, yeah.
Because I used to be the same way.
I thought everybody looked the same.
joe rogan
Yeah, that's how I looked at them.
ronnie coleman
I know exactly what you're talking about.
Everybody was just big to me.
unidentified
Huge.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, huge.
joe rogan
Yeah, everybody looks preposterous.
ronnie coleman
And I thought I could never, ever...
Attain that.
joe rogan
But you did.
ronnie coleman
I did, yeah.
joe rogan
Not only did you set the gold standard.
Isn't that crazy looking back?
ronnie coleman
It's crazy looking back.
joe rogan
Do you ever wake up and just say like, what the fuck did I do?
ronnie coleman
Look what I did.
Yeah.
Because when you're doing it, you're always in that mindset of doing it.
joe rogan
Yes.
ronnie coleman
You're not enjoying it.
joe rogan
Right.
You just sit in the grind.
ronnie coleman
You can't sit around and enjoy it.
joe rogan
Right.
ronnie coleman
You got to stay focused and dedicated.
You gotta be always, you know, mindful.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
You know, so there's no enjoying all that when you have success like that.
joe rogan
Well, I think that mindset, too, is the only way you become a champion like yourself.
ronnie coleman
Exactly.
joe rogan
That just keep going, keep grinding mindset, don't enjoy anything.
ronnie coleman
Yep, yep.
You enjoy it later.
joe rogan
Yeah.
ronnie coleman
After it's all over with.
I only enjoy it now.
joe rogan
There's such a small handful of Mr. Olympias.
I mean, that is the elite of the elite club to be in for bodybuilders.
I mean, you've got to have an amazing sense of satisfaction.
ronnie coleman
And a lot of guys that win it, win it multiple times.
joe rogan
Yeah, why is that?
ronnie coleman
Because it's only an elite number of guys can be Mr. Olympia.
And once you get there, you find the formula.
And it takes a while for somebody to come in and knock you off.
Because nobody found that formula like you have.
Eight in a row for me.
Eight in a row for Lee Haney.
Seven for Arnold.
Six for Yates.
Cutler, four.
How many guys did I just name?
And how many years is that?
joe rogan
That's a lot of years, right?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
I mean, what an elite group of human beings.
ronnie coleman
Just me, Lee, and Arnold is 25 years almost.
joe rogan
Yeah.
That's crazy.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
Three guys, 25 years.
joe rogan
When you say the right formula, it's the right amount of training, the right amount of rest, the right amount of food, the right nutrition, all the above.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
And that's hard to do.
joe rogan
It's hard to dial it in.
ronnie coleman
It's hard to dial it in.
joe rogan
And did you dial it in with the help of a coach?
ronnie coleman
Nutritionist.
joe rogan
Just a nutritionist.
ronnie coleman
I couldn't have done it by myself.
joe rogan
But what about a coach?
ronnie coleman
That's the same thing.
joe rogan
Same thing.
Does a nutritionist maintain your schedule for your workouts as well?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
Well, I did my own workout schedule.
joe rogan
So you did that all yourself?
ronnie coleman
All myself, yeah.
He did all my other stuff.
joe rogan
So he did all the food, made sure your body's well-fueled, but all the weightlifting, all that was set up by you?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, that was me.
joe rogan
How did you know when it's enough and when it's not enough and when it's too much?
ronnie coleman
Well, you can only do so much.
You can only do what you can do.
You know your limitations.
And you know what you gotta do.
So once you figure all this out, that's your formula.
And that's what you take from year to year.
joe rogan
And that formula is based on your body and how your body performs.
ronnie coleman
Everybody's body is different.
joe rogan
Did you ever have guys coming up to you, I mean you must have had guys coming up to you saying, what do I have to do to be like you?
ronnie coleman
All the time.
What did you tell them?
I'm a personal trainer.
That's what I had, you know?
I wasn't able to do all that on my own.
The guy who gave me the free membership to the gym, Brian Dobson, is the guy that taught me all this stuff.
He taught me how to pose.
He taught me how to train as a bodybuilder and not a powerlifter.
It's two different types of training.
He taught me everything I needed to know, and he was kind of like my personal trainer.
If he wouldn't have taught me all that stuff, I wouldn't have knew nothing.
And so I always tell people, if you want to know something, learn somebody that knows all that stuff.
And that's how you get the right formula.
joe rogan
Was this guy with you throughout your whole career?
ronnie coleman
No, no.
joe rogan
Just in the beginning, just to teach you the basics?
ronnie coleman
Basics, yeah.
joe rogan
And then from then on, it was all you?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, I had to get other trainers and nutritionists.
I had some trainers and nutritionists that weren't that good along the way, like a couple.
And I finally found the right guy from Flex Wheeler.
He turned me on to the guy who helped me win my first Olympia, Chad Nichols.
He's the guy that found the right formula for me.
joe rogan
And when you had this right formula, how many workouts a day were you doing?
ronnie coleman
One.
joe rogan
Just one?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
Just one long workout?
ronnie coleman
An hour and a half.
joe rogan
Hour and a half every day, that's it?
ronnie coleman
Hour and 15 minutes.
joe rogan
Really?
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
So it's just about the intensity.
ronnie coleman
It's about the intensity.
joe rogan
And was there a time where you were working out more than that?
ronnie coleman
Never.
joe rogan
You felt like it was too much?
ronnie coleman
No.
joe rogan
You just always had it dialed in?
ronnie coleman
Always had it dialed in.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
You know, I had to do two hours of cardio a day.
joe rogan
Two hours of cardio?
ronnie coleman
An hour in the morning and an hour at night after I got off work.
joe rogan
Wow.
ronnie coleman
Yeah.
joe rogan
What kind of shit?
Like elliptical or something?
ronnie coleman
I did...
Stairmaster, I would do the elliptical, and the treadmill.
joe rogan
You would run on a treadmill?
ronnie coleman
Well, I ain't gonna call it running.
joe rogan
I'm just thinking you're so big.
What did you do, just kind of fast walking?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, like two, about three miles an hour.
joe rogan
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah.
joe rogan
Yeah, that makes more sense.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, yeah, for an hour.
joe rogan
An hour.
So this is just to burn off the fat?
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
unidentified
Wow.
joe rogan
Goddamn, you must hate cardio now.
ronnie coleman
No, I still do it.
joe rogan
You still do it?
unidentified
Yeah.
joe rogan
But I would imagine that that would be enough cardio for the rest of your fucking life, two hours a day, every day.
I'd be like, oh my God, if I never see another piece of cardio equipment again for the rest of my life.
ronnie coleman
Well, you get used to it after a while, you know.
joe rogan
What do you do now?
ronnie coleman
I can only do, I do the bike now.
I can walk on the treadmill, but I have to hold on.
joe rogan
Hold on the handles, yeah.
ronnie coleman
So I don't do it, I just do the bike.
joe rogan
Yeah.
Well, listen, man, after this show is over, I'm going to connect you to Dr. Neil Reardon, who is in Dallas, and I really hope that he can help you.
ronnie coleman
It'll be great if you do it.
I'm never giving up on it.
joe rogan
I know you're not giving up on anything, man.
Guys like you don't give up on anything.
ronnie coleman
I'm going to walk again unassisted.
I guarantee that.
joe rogan
I believe you.
If anybody can do it, you can do it.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, exactly.
If I can't do it, it can't be done.
joe rogan
I want to connect you to him and wish you the best of luck.
I appreciate you, brother.
Thank you for coming in here, man.
ronnie coleman
I appreciate you inviting me.
Oh, I got a new book out.
joe rogan
Oh, okay.
ronnie coleman
What is it?
It's called Yeah, Buddy.
joe rogan
Yeah, Buddy.
ronnie coleman
That's what I'm saying.
joe rogan
That is what I'm saying.
ronnie coleman
Get it on Amazon.
And my company is Ronnie Coleman Signature Series.
That's how I make my living now.
I own my own supplement company.
Ronnie Coleman.net is that.
And my book is called Yeah, Buddy.
One of my favorite sayings.
Yeah, but in my incredible story, you can get it on Amazon.
joe rogan
All right, folks.
Go get that book.
Go to RonnieCorman.com.net.
RonnieCorman.net.
ronnie coleman
Get some of those supplements.
We got 25, 30 different products.
joe rogan
Beautiful.
I hope we sell a bunch of them.
ronnie coleman
Oh, we have been selling a bunch.
joe rogan
Sell some more.
Thank you, brother.
Appreciate you.
ronnie coleman
Thank you for having me on.
joe rogan
Ronnie Coleman, ladies and gentlemen.
ronnie coleman
Yeah, buddy.
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