EST. MCMLXX  ·  VENICE BEACH DOCTRINE

THE IRON
PROGRAMME

PPL · UL — Five days under the bar. Two days to grow.

The Golden Era Creed

I

Strength First

Get strong before chasing size. The Golden Era champions came up through powerlifting and Olympic lifting. Heavy compound barbell work is the foundation — everything else is detail.

II

Volume Is The Blueprint

High sets, hard reps, no shortcuts. The work was done with heavy barbells and dumbbells — there were barely any machines at Gold's. Outwork everyone, then eat and rest.

III

Mind In The Muscle

Visualise the muscle growing under the bar. Every rep with intent, full range, deep stretch, hard contraction. Stretch the lats between sets. Flex after training.

IV

Old Lifts Only

Squat, deadlift, bench, military press, row, curl, dip, pull-up. If it wasn't on the floor at Diamond Gym or Gold's in 1975, it isn't in this programme.

V-Taper Intelligence

The taper is built from two directions: widen the top, tighten the bottom. Every session in this programme feeds one of those two ends.

1.6 : 1Shoulder-to-waist ratio target

The elite-tier ratio. Expect 12–24 months of consistent training, eating, and bulk/cut cycling to reach it. Measure monthly: shoulder circumference ÷ waist circumference.

10–15%Body fat for a visible taper

The taper appears around 12–15% body fat and is at its sharpest at 10–12%. Below the muscle, the cut weeks do their work here.

WIDTHPriority muscles, in order

  • Lats — the primary driver of width; they create the illusion of broad shoulders and a small waist
  • Side delts — the shoulder cap; undertrained side delts flatten the whole taper
  • Rear delts & traps — posture and thickness

Posture Is Free Width

Face pulls strengthen the rear delts and lower traps, pulling the shoulders back against the forward-rounding from heavy pressing. Standing tall with the shoulder blades set instantly makes the upper body read wider. That's why they're locked into Pull day.

Don't Bulk The Waist

Core work in this programme strengthens and stabilises without thickening the midsection — no heavy weighted oblique work beyond what's programmed. A tight waist is half the V. The other half hangs off the pull-up bar.

The 4 : 1 Cycle

Four weeks building, one week cutting. Repeat. The bulk lays down muscle under heavy iron; the cut week strips the film of fat off the waist and keeps the taper honest year-round.

Then the cycle resets — week 6 is week 1

Bulk Weeks

  • Calorie surplus — modest, not a dirty bulk
  • ~1g protein per lb of bodyweight, the Golden Era standard
  • Whole foods first: eggs, milk, red meat, chicken, rice, potatoes
  • Push the weights up every week — progressive overload is the point of the surplus

Cut Week

  • Drop into a calorie deficit; protein stays high
  • Keep lifting heavy — the weights hold the muscle, the deficit drops the fat
  • Add the treadmill: steady-state sessions on rest days
  • Don't chase a number — one week, then back to building

The Old School Plate

The Golden Era ate simple and high-protein: eggs, whole milk, steak, chicken, cheese, potatoes, rice. Protein first in every meal, biggest meal after training. No supplements required beyond food — they built the greatest physiques in history out of a butcher's shop.

The Split

DAY IPUSH

Chest · Shoulders · Triceps

WARM-UP — rotate each session: Rowing Machine / Treadmill / Bike

LiftSets × Reps
Barbell Bench Press5 × 6–10
Incline Barbell Press4 × 6–10
Dumbbell FlyesDeep stretch at the bottom — Arnold's pec builder4 × 8–12
Dumbbell PulloverThe Golden Era ribcage expander3 × 10–12
Dips3 × failure
Close-Grip Bench Press3 × 8–10
Overhead Barbell Tricep Extension3 × 10–12
Push Ups2 × failure

AbsHanging Leg Raises 3 × 15·Plank 3 × 45 sec·Dead Bug 2 × 10 each side

DAY IIPULL

Back · Biceps · Rear Delts · Forearms

WARM-UP — rotate each session: Rowing Machine / Treadmill / Bike

LiftSets × Reps
Wide-Grip Pull UpsThe single best V-taper builder — stretch the lats between sets5 × failure
Barbell Bent-Over Row5 × 6–10
Dumbbell Single-Arm Row3 × 10–12
Lat Pulldown3 × 10–12
Face Pulls (cable)Posture work — free width3 × 12–15
Barbell Curl4 × 8–12
Incline Dumbbell Curl3 × 10–12
Hammer Curls3 × 10–12
Barbell Shrugs3 × 12–15
Reverse Barbell CurlForearms + brachialis3 × 10–12
Barbell Wrist Curl3 × 15–20

AbsBicycle Crunches 3 × 40 sec·Cable Woodchoppers 3 × 12 each side·Hollow Body Hold 3 × 30 sec

DAY IIILEGS

Quads · Hamstrings · Calves

WARM-UP — rotate each session: Rowing Machine / Treadmill / Bike

LiftSets × Reps
Barbell Back SquatFree bar. The cornerstone of the Golden Era leg day6 × 8–10
Leg Press4 × 10–12
Stiff-Leg Deadlift4 × 10–12
Leg Curl4 × 12
Leg Extension3 × 12
Standing Calf RaisesArnold trained calves up to six days a week — never skip these5 × 15–20

AbsLeg Raises 3 × 15·Russian Twists 3 × 20·Ab Wheel Rollout 3 × 8–10

DAY IVUPPER

Shoulders · Arms · Forearms

WARM-UP — rotate each session: Rowing Machine / Treadmill / Bike

LiftSets × Reps
Seated Barbell Military PressThe old king of shoulder builders4 × 6–10
Dumbbell Lateral RaisesSide delts = visible width4 × 12–15
Dumbbell Rear Delt Fly3 × 12–15
Barbell Curl4 × 8–12
Incline Dumbbell Curl3 × 10–12
Concentration CurlEyes closed, mind in the bicep — the Arnold special3 × 10–12
Close-Grip Bench Press3 × 8–10
Cable Tricep Pushdown3 × 10–12
Dumbbell Wrist Curl3 × 15–20
Farmer's CarryGrip and forearm thickness, old-school3 × 40 m

AbsCable Crunch 3 × 15·Side Plank 3 × 30 sec each side·Reverse Crunches 3 × 15

DAY VLOWER

Posterior Chain · Calves

WARM-UP — rotate each session: Rowing Machine / Treadmill / Bike

LiftSets × Reps
Conventional DeadliftHeavy, strict, off the floor5 × 5–8
Barbell Lunge4 × 10 each leg
Barbell Hip Thrust3 × 10–15
Leg Curl4 × 10–12
Standing Calf Raises5 × 15–20

AbsWeighted Sit Ups 3 × 15·Pallof Press 3 × 12 each side·Flutter Kicks 3 × 30 sec

DAYS VI & VII — REST & TREADMILL

The muscle is torn down under the bar; it's built back in bed and at the table. Take both days off the iron. On one or both, walk the treadmill — steady state, 20–30 minutes, conversational pace. During cut weeks, do both treadmill sessions without fail.

Recovery Doctrine

Recovery beats the workout. If the body says no, the answer is rest — a missed session costs nothing; a forced one under fatigue costs weeks.

Green Light — Train

  • Slept 7+ hours
  • No lingering joint pain
  • Last session's soreness has faded
  • Appetite and energy normal

Amber — Train Light

  • Tired but functional
  • Drop the weight 10–20%, keep the movements
  • Cut the last set of everything
  • Skip failure sets entirely

Red — Rest

  • Run down, ill, or sharp pain anywhere
  • Two bad nights of sleep in a row
  • Strength suddenly down across the board
  • Take the day. Walk. Eat. Sleep. Return stronger

IF IN DOUBT — REST.