Clarence Bass Explained

Clarence Bass
Birth Place:Albuquerque, New Mexico
Education:Juris Doctor
Alma Mater:University of New Mexico School of Law

Clarence Bass (born 1937 in New Mexico) is an American writer, fitness expert, and retired lawyer. He is best known for his book and DVD series Ripped, which chronicle his fitness, including becoming a past-40 bodybuilding champion.[1] Bass was a writer for Muscle & Fitness where he had a question and answer column. He has continued to write, documenting his fitness over a span of approximately 60 years in various books that he has released since 1980.[2] [3] He is featured in the books Second Wind[4] and Legends of the Iron Game.[5] In the June 2017 issue of Men's Health, Bass was named "one of America’s greatest fitness visionaries."[6] He is an advocate of plant-based nutrition.[7]

Early life and education

Bass was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1937.[8] His parents were both in the health field, one a doctor and the other a nurse.

He attended Albuquerque High School, where as a junior, he won the New Mexico State Championship in the pentathlon. He excelled in wrestling, placing second in the New Mexico State Championships his senior year.[9] Although he began lifting weights at the age of 13, it was during high school that he began to get into Olympic lifting, which helped lead him into a career in health and fitness.[9]

Bass earned an undergraduate in psychology from the University of New Mexico, then attended the University of New Mexico School of Law.[8] While obtaining his Juris Doctor degree, he focused his athletics primarily on weightlifting, achieving a 275-pound Olympic press, a 245 snatch, and 325 clean and jerk with a body weight of 180 lbs. After graduation, he went on to practice law in Albuquerque.[10]

Bass described his own diet as lacto-ovo-pescetarian.[7]

Career

Bass began his professional career as a lawyer practicing in Albuquerque. During his time as an attorney, he became prominent in the world of fitness and retired from the legal field in 1994 to concentrate on health and fitness full-time. While also working full-time as a lawyer, Bass entered numerous bodybuilding competitions and won numerous awards.[4]

Bass entered his first bodybuilding competition in 1976. A year later in 1977, he measured a body fat percentage of 2.4%, measured using hydrostatic weighing at Lovelace Medical Center.[8] His first successful competition was at the New Mexico Bodybuilding Championship in 1978, taking home the awards for "Best Legs" and "Most Muscular".[8] The same year he began competing in the national Past 40 competitions, winning the AAU Past 40 Mr. America, short class.[4] The next year he won his class in the AAU Past 40 Mr. USA, along with the overall awards for Best Legs, Best Abdominals, and Most Muscular Man.[9] His final year of competition came in 1980, again competing in the Past 40 Mr. America. He placed 2nd in the middleweight class and subsequently retired from competition.[8]

Bass was featured in the book Second Wind: The Rise of the Ageless Athlete.[4] In the book, he addressed his reasons for retiring from competition, stating, “I had nothing to gain and everything to lose.” He added, “I developed my reputation with new photos [every few years] and these contests aren’t a lot of fun.”[4]

Bass wrote his first book in 1980, the same year he retired from competition. Titled Ripped: The Sensible Way to Achieve Ultimate Muscularity, the book detailed his fitness routine and how he reduced his body fat to 2.4%.[11] It also documented his experience during his bodybuilding competitions, including the Past-40 Mr. America and Mr. USA contests.

The book was originally sent to Bill Reynolds, then editor in chief of Muscle & Fitness, who shared it with Joe Weider. The book led to Bass being invited to write a column in the magazine, which ran over the course of sixteen years.[12]

Bass and his wife Carol formed Ripped Enterprises the same year, a company he uses to sell his books and related items.[8]

Bass continued writing for Muscle & Fitness, and released a follow-up book entitled Ripped 2 which was then followed by Ripped 3. From 1984 to 1994, he published additional books including Lean Advantage, a three-book series composed of various writings from his time at Muscle & Fitness.[13] He also published the book Lean for Life which was released in 1989. Bass has released additional books since the 1996 release of Challenge Yourself, a summary of his diet and training.

His books led to a series of DVDs, which he first released in 2002 in collaboration with Wayne and Tina Gallasch of GMV Productions. The first was based on his book Ripped, with additional DVDs following in 2003 and 2004.[14]

Bass' fitness training has also extended past bodybuilding, also concentrating on indoor rowing. By 1992, he was ranked 21st in the world for light-heavyweight men ages 50 to 59. His highest ranking came in 2003 when he was 4th in the 500-meter row for light-weight men ages 60 to 69.[10]

Bibliography

Filmography

Awards and recognition

Bass has won numerous awards throughout his career in bodybuilding. He was among 100 UNM graduates chosen by the Alumni Association to represent the "Best Efforts" of the university on the occasion of its 100th anniversary. In 2003, The Association of Oldetime Barbell & Strongmen honored him with its highest award, the Vic Boff Award for lifetime achievement.[15] Photos of Bass from ages 15 to 70 are on display in the Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports at the University of Texas at Austin.[16] In 2013, experts in exercise physiology gathered at the Stark Center to celebrate Bass' lifetime achievements and discuss his book Take Charge.[17]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: An Interview with Nutrition/Training Guru & Bodybuilding Legend Clarence Bass. 5 September 2014. Bodybuilding.com. 7 June 2007.
  2. News: Interview with Ripped Author and Living Legend Clarence Bass. 5 September 2014. Muscle & Strength.
  3. News: Holman. Steve. Clarence Bass Reveals His Secrets for Staying Lean and Muscular at 70. 5 September 2014. Ironman Magazine. 10 January 2009.
  4. Book: Bergquist. Lee. Second Wind The Rise of the Ageless Athlete. 2009. Human Kinetics. 9781450407847.
  5. Book: Pearl. Bill. Legends of the Iron Game. 2010. Bill Pearl Enterprises. 9780962991028.
  6. Heil. Nick. Generations: 79 is the New 29. 126–131 . . 1 June 2017 .
  7. Web site: 2014. Problems with the Vegan Diet?. Clarence Bass. en-GB. January 21, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220121230505/https://www.cbass.com/FAQ(10).htm. live.
  8. Book: Miller. Carl. The Miller Fitness Plan. 2005. Sunstone Press. 9780865344815.
  9. News: Five Lessons I Learned From Clarence Bass. 5 September 2014. Poliquin Group. 24 October 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20130919045521/http://www.poliquingroup.com/ArticlesMultimedia/Articles/Article/720/Five_Lessons_I_Learned_From_Clarence_Bass.aspx. 19 September 2013. dead.
  10. News: Clarence Bass. 5 September 2014. Ageless Timeless.
  11. News: Beardsley. Chris. Book review: Ripped, by Clarence Bass. 5 September 2014. The Garage Gym. 12 March 2012.
  12. Web site: Ageless Bodybuilding. Muscle.com. 11 April 2007 . 5 September 2014.
  13. Book: Pearl. Bill. Getting Stronger: Weight Training for Sports. 2005. Shelter Publications, Inc.. 9780936070384.
  14. Web site: The Ripped Collection on DVD with Clarence Bass. GMV Productions. 5 September 2014.
  15. Web site: Association of Oldtime Barbell and Strongmen . Wlinfo.com . 2009-05-22 . 2010-08-23.
  16. Web site: Current Exhibit - Muscle and Grace. The H.J. Lutcher Stark Center. 14 September 2014.
  17. Web site: Clarence Bass at the Stark Center - Conference on Exercise Science and his New Book Take Charge. Stark Center. 10 September 2014.