4.8 • 827 Ratings
🗓️ 15 August 2022
⏱️ 91 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Joe Sullivan has been powerlifting for more than half his life. Starting as a young teen, Joe has been in and amongst the culture, starting with the USAPL, and eventually migrating to the untested side of the sport where he’s made his mark for the better part of the last decade. Most recently he set the all-time world record squat in the 100kg class at an astonishing 380kg, but it was a long road to get here. He’s overcome catastrophic injury, mental hurdles, and adversity that tie him deeply to powerlifting, and we were honored to have him on Iron Culture to share his candid perspective. He came from an era where raw powerlifting wasn’t the default, and when raw lifters identified with one another first and foremost, rather than with their federation. So sit back and enjoy this conversation where you get an insider’s viewpoint on the rapidly changing sport we know and love.
0:00 Introducing Joe
Jeremey Hamilton record-breaking meet @220lb/100kg https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHkMYQhoOVE
Iron Culture Episode 180: Cultural Shifts in Lifting https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRvaakZ4y6A
13:10 The rapid turnover and rise in raw/tested powerlifting
24:05 Joe’s perspectives on changes in competition judging standards
33:32 Powerlifter stereotypes from a decade ago and Joe’s shift to untested competition
39:53 Joe’s journey and lifting career
1:01:08 Joe’s comeback from injury and breaking squat records – “Adapt and Overcome”
Joe’s bar bending squat https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neYyq_ubavg
1:24:42 Reframing your mindset through your journey and separating yourself from where you once were
1:27:55 Where can you find Joe?
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Eric. |
0:03.1 | Omar. |
0:04.4 | I really needed this episode today, man. |
0:07.7 | Tell me why. |
0:08.9 | Because we're going to talk about back when powerlifting was power lifting, which is my |
0:12.7 | favorite topic. |
0:14.0 | You know, back when I used to squat 4.05 in high school, bench 405. |
0:19.1 | It's an interesting story of why I squatted and bench the same. But nonetheless, |
0:23.3 | these young kids these days, I'm looking at the clouds right now and I'm shaking my fist, |
0:29.2 | they don't understand what powerlifting was and is really like. And they might not know |
0:35.1 | some of the origins of their most popular lifters. |
0:38.2 | What inspired them to first start lifting in the first place? |
0:41.0 | So we're peeling back the onion layers to get to the core. |
0:44.2 | And by the end of this, you might very well cry. |
0:46.9 | Well, I was crying just before we got on this podcast, Omar, as I do most afternoons. |
0:51.9 | So that's nothing new for me, but I'm really looking forward to bringing that same level of emotion |
0:57.4 | to the listener who are going to get to meet our awesome guest today. |
1:01.8 | Wow. |
1:02.2 | We have someone on because we talk about on Iron Culture being for all lifters, |
1:07.5 | and we've spoken extensively once again about powerlifting we've had a lot of power |
1:12.3 | lifters from the tested side and i'm not trying to create this once again false dichotomy like the |
1:16.3 | tested side the untested side but like everything every cultural group people kind of get with other |
... |
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