In April, New York University in an entrepreneurship competition at New York University’s Stern School of Business. The startup judges deemed worthy of the investment: a clothing company called , which 鈥渙ffers 聽that resists movement to help people tone muscle and burn extra calories during everyday activities.鈥
The 75G check was made out on 4/25/14, making it clear that this is neither an April Fool鈥檚 joke, nor 2010. Which brings us to a segment Seth Meyers and Amy Poehler first popularized on Saturday Night Live: Really!?
Really!? In 2010, Reebok鈥檚 EasyTone shoes were killing it. According to , the company generated an estimated $1 billion in revenue from global sales of sneakers the company claimed would work women鈥檚 glutes 28 percent more, and their hamstrings and calves 11 percent more than wearing regular shoes.
Other sports brands put out their own 鈥渢oning鈥 kicks as well. Fila had sneakers. Skechers made . The world was crazy for gear that made doin鈥 your thang i.e. walking to the store, standing in a meeting, etc. a calorie-incinerating workout.
鈥淏ody toning apparel is a natural progression of the recent successes in the toning footwear market,鈥 said Jon Epstein, President of Fila USA in from October 2010. That鈥檚 when Fila announced the creation of its Body Toning System, or BTS clothes. The company was careful not to make any quantifiable claims, stating simply that 鈥淏TS apparel is designed to increase muscle exercise which improves the efficiency as well as recovery of an existing workout.鈥
Reebok launched a line of EasyTone clothes around the same time. Then researchers started looking into the toning clothes鈥 effectiveness.
The American Council on Exercise funded a study looking into Fila鈥檚 fluffy promise that a woman could 鈥渁chieve amazing results in half the time鈥 with Fila鈥檚 new $50 Toning Resistance Tight Capri. Researchers threw 16 women between the ages of 18 and 24 on a treadmill and had them walk for five minutes at different speeds while wearing the pants, and again with regular pants. The result? Here鈥檚 what :
Although the research showed a slight increase in calorie burn while wearing Fila鈥檚 toning capris, in a real-world scenario that boost would be negligible鈥β
In response to the claims of a 50-percent increase in muscle workouts, the researchers reported that the Fila capris didn鈥檛 deliver there either鈥β
鈥淚n order to provide enough resistance to be beneficial, the pants would have to be so restrictive that you wouldn鈥檛 be able to easily move. To achieve a 50-percent increase in muscle activation, you鈥檇 have to be wearing something akin to a straight jacket.鈥澛
That last quote is from researcher John Porcari. On the up-side, Porcari鈥檚 fellow researcher Alexa Kleingartner told ACE, 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 recommend buying them to make a difference in the effectiveness of your workout, but the extra compression and tightness may give you a butt lift and a better shape.鈥 If looking good makes you feel like working out, that鈥檚 a plus. The pants, in other words, were like Spanx you could show off; they鈥檇 make you look skinnier, but they wouldn鈥檛 actually make you skinnier.
( found that toning pants increased calories burned while walking up a 5 to 10-percent grade because the clothing resisted hip flexion. But that study was partially funded by a toning clothes company, making it difficult to take seriously.)
Meanwhile, ladies started stuffing their jiggly bits in to resistance pants hoping the clothes would be the miracle companies promised.
Then came the bombshell lawsuit. The Federal Trade Commission fined Reebok $25 million for making false claims about its toning shoes and apparel. The from 鈥渕aking any health or fitness-related efficacy claims for toning shoes and other toning apparel unless the claims are true and backed by scientific evidence.鈥
Reebok discontinued their EasyTone clothes. Fila doesn鈥檛 appear to sell their toning line of clothes anymore either. The closest thing they currently stock is a $35 that says it鈥檒l give a 鈥渂ody sculpting boost.鈥
So really!? NYU medical school students? In , the students claim they鈥檝e invented 鈥渃lothes that work you out!鈥 by naturally resisting the body鈥檚 mechanics, 鈥渒ind of like moving in water which burns up to 50% more calories.鈥 Fifty percent more than what? Sitting on your bum all day?
The video then goes on to state that the 鈥渁verage woman walks 1.5 hours per day, burning 280 calories.鈥 Maybe in New York City? If that were true, nobody would need toning clothes鈥攚e鈥檇 be infinitely healthier already. , only 21 to 34 percent of US adults walk for 30 minutes five times a week.
But for argument鈥檚 sake, let鈥檚 say that yes, women walk 1.5 hours per day. That鈥檚 how long you鈥檇 have to walk, according to Skinesiology, to reap an extra 100-calorie benefit from wearing their tights. So if you鈥檙e already walking around a lot, maybe these pants can provide a small benefit. But if they鈥檙e as uncomfortable as researcher John Porcari thought they鈥檇 have to be to give you a workout, who鈥檇 keep them on all day to find out?
explains that Skinesiology鈥檚 claims come from the students鈥 own lab testing. It鈥檒l be interesting to see what objective researchers find. Have these students stumbled upon a radical new resistance band design that neither Reebok nor Fila鈥檚 R&D teams could create?
I hate to lay into entrepreneurial youngsters, but it does seem like you鈥檙e repeating the errors of those who have gone before. Please prove me wrong.聽