Working out is hard. Streaming just might make it easier. Consider: Peloton’s high-end, high-tech stationary bike, equipped with a massive 22-in. touchscreen between the handlebars. The device streams live and on-demand classes to hundreds of thousands of cyclists at home. Bikes cost $1,995, and if you want to ride along to classes, you have to pay a $39 monthly fee. But that hasn’t stopped the company, founded in 2012, from building a fervent following that includes ordinary folks as well as celebrities like @lesdogggg and @katehudson. In fact, @onepeloton has been so successful that it’s joined the unicorn club—a moniker given to startups valued at $1 billion or higher. Peloton is just one example of the latest revamp of the home #gym, so crowded with the evidence of previous trends and the best intentions: old-school stationary bikes, treadmills and heavy bags. The bet this time is that the famously permeable interface between technology and human will goad fitness enthusiasts to forgo studios for workouts they can follow online. Robin Arzon (@robinnyc), photographed here by @lovebryan, is a popular #Peloton trainer and the company’s vice president of #fitness programming. Arzon has some 139,000 followers on Instagram and receives thousands of messages from fans each week. “Whether it’s a weight-loss journey, recovering from an illness or dealing with a divorce, the most impactful stories are when people rise above,” Arzon says of those interactions with her followers. “And they use the bike and our instructors as tools for that.” Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by Bryan Derballa (@lovebryan) for TIME

timeさん(@time)が投稿した動画 -

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 6月3日 02時15分


Working out is hard. Streaming just might make it easier. Consider: Peloton’s high-end, high-tech stationary bike, equipped with a massive 22-in. touchscreen between the handlebars. The device streams live and on-demand classes to hundreds of thousands of cyclists at home. Bikes cost $1,995, and if you want to ride along to classes, you have to pay a $39 monthly fee. But that hasn’t stopped the company, founded in 2012, from building a fervent following that includes ordinary folks as well as celebrities like @レスリー・ジョーンズ and @ケイト・ハドソン. In fact, @onepeloton has been so successful that it’s joined the unicorn club—a moniker given to startups valued at $1 billion or higher. Peloton is just one example of the latest revamp of the home #gym, so crowded with the evidence of previous trends and the best intentions: old-school stationary bikes, treadmills and heavy bags. The bet this time is that the famously permeable interface between technology and human will goad fitness enthusiasts to forgo studios for workouts they can follow online. Robin Arzon (@robinnyc), photographed here by @lovebryan, is a popular #Peloton trainer and the company’s vice president of #fitness programming. Arzon has some 139,000 followers on Instagram and receives thousands of messages from fans each week. “Whether it’s a weight-loss journey, recovering from an illness or dealing with a divorce, the most impactful stories are when people rise above,” Arzon says of those interactions with her followers. “And they use the bike and our instructors as tools for that.” Read more on TIME.com. Photograph by Bryan Derballa (@lovebryan) for TIME


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

11,658

163

2018/6/3

フルームのインスタグラム
フルームさんがフォロー

TIME Magazineを見た方におすすめの有名人