InosukeWorkout posts 95-day update

- Japanese X account InosukeWorkout posted a 95-day fitness update on June 2 showing 100 standing ab roller repetitions, progress photos and a current weight reading. - The post listed a body weight of 66.0 kilograms, described as 4.4 kilograms lower, and showed public engagement counts of 5,522 likes and 594 reposts. - The June 2 update remains visible on InosukeWorkout’s public X account, where the progress photos and ab roller clip were posted.

A June 2 post from the Japanese X account InosukeWorkout showed a 95-day fitness update built around a short ab roller clip, side-by-side progress photos and a current weight reading. The public post said the account holder had reached 100 standing ab roller repetitions and listed current weight at 66.0 kilograms. The same post said that figure was down 4.4 kilograms. Public engagement figures visible with the post showed 5,522 likes and 594 reposts as of the source briefing tied to the post. ### What exactly did the June 2 post show? The June 2 update combined three distinct progress markers in one post: a performance claim, body-composition tracking and visual comparison photos. The clip showed standing ab roller repetitions rather than the more common kneeling version, and the text attached to the post said the total was 100 repetitions. The same update also included multiple photos intended to document physical changes over the 95-day period. (x.com) The account listed current weight at 66.0 kilograms and said that represented a decrease of 4.4 kilograms. ### Why are people focusing on the ab roller number? The number highlighted in the post was 100 standing ab roller repetitions. Standing ab roller reps are commonly treated by fitness users as a more advanced variation because they require a longer rollout and greater control from the hips, trunk and shoulders than kneeling reps. (x.com) That framing was implicit in the way the clip was presented inside the update, with the repetition count placed alongside the photos and weight figure as one of the headline markers of progress. The post itself did not include a longer training log, a full workout plan or a detailed explanation of how the 95 days were structured. What it did provide was a simple before-and-after format: one number for time elapsed, one number for body weight and one number for the featured exercise. ### What do the weight figures in the post indicate? The weight figure shown in the June 2 update was 66.0 kilograms. (x.com) The same post said that total was 4.4 kilograms lower than the starting point used by the account for this progress check-in. Those figures indicate a starting weight of 70.4 kilograms if the posted decrease is subtracted from the current reading. That calculation is based on the numbers displayed in the post rather than a separate statement from the account. (x.com) ### How much attention did the update get? The engagement figures attached to the public post were 5,522 likes and 594 reposts in the source briefing for the June 2 update. (x.com) Those numbers made the post one of the more visible recent fitness-related items surfaced in the social briefing provided for this story. Because social-media engagement counts can change over time, those figures should be read as the counts attached to the post in the sourced briefing rather than as a fixed final total. (x.com) ### What can readers verify for themselves? The public record for this story is the June 2 post on InosukeWorkout’s X account. That post is where the 95-day label, the 100 standing ab roller repetitions, the 66.0-kilogram weight reading, the claimed 4.4-kilogram decrease and the progress photos were presented together. (x.com) As of June 3, the next concrete reference point is the same public account feed, where any follow-up update from InosukeWorkout would appear after the June 2 post. (x.com)

Get your own daily briefing

Scout delivers personalized news, insights, and conversations tailored to your role and industry.

Download on the App Store

Shared from Scout - Be the smartest in the room.