![]() ![]() ![]() Expanded exercise technique and protocol descriptions were published in 2011. In 2009, Hutchins and his wife joined Renaissance Exercise, continuing to produce evolutionary designs for exercise equipment. ![]() The New York Times Magazine included Super Slow and Hutchins in the 2001 edition of its annual Year in Ideas series. Numerous similar methods have been spun off by members of the guild and others as their ideas or business models developed. Hutchins developed an interest group, calling it the Super Slow Exercise Guild (Inc.), which met to refine techniques and published articles in its newsletter, The Exercise Standard, from 1994 to 2000. In the early 1990s, a certification program was developed for exercise professionals to bring standardization to SuperSlow training. In 1987, he compiled historical developments of Nautilus equipment and wrote video scripts for detailed Nautilus education.Īfter leaving Nautilus, Hutchins established his own exercise practice, continuing to develop the Super Slow techniques and eventually publishing several editions of a technical manual for the application of Super Slow exercise. In 1986, Hutchins worked as an exercise equipment designer and prototype developer, specializing in the application of coupled movement arms. He refined its application with over 8,000 one-on-one workouts between 19. During this year, Hutchins wrote the SuperSlow Protocol article. In 1982, Hutchins and his wife, Brenda, were sent by Arthur Jones to Gainesville, Florida, to supervise the exercise program for the Nautilus-sponsored osteoporosis study at the University of Florida Medical School. From 1979 to 1982, he served as inside salesperson and traveling speaker, addressing scores of Nautilus clinics yearly. In 1977, Hutchins was employed at Nautilus as a surgery technician, writer, surgical photographer, and proofreader. Hutchins's serious contributions to the field of exercise, began in 1975 when he served Darden as a proofreader and writer. Later, in 1968, this friend introduced Hutchins to Ellington Darden, and through Darden in 1971, Hutchins learned of Arthur Jones and Nautilus, Inc. Hutchins was introduced in 1966, to strength training by a family friend who explained the importance of physical strength to musicianship and built Hutchins his first weight bench. Ken Hutchins (born 20th century) is an American inventor who defined and popularized the Super Slow form of resistance training exercise, and developed methodology, trainer certifications, and exercise equipment to specifically support the techniques. ![]()
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