The other night I had to interview two 21-year-old twin models.
Yeah, it's a tough job.
And by tough, I mean telling Jess I needed the car to go out to Mi-key's to meet them.
"No touching the models!" she ordered.
Of course not! I think that's a violation my journalism ethics contract. I'm writing an article about them for an April issue of MKE.
Kristin and Cory: Damn!
In real life, Kristin and Cory were fully covered and conservatively dressed. Meeting them also put to rest a suspicion that they were just more fake hot chicks that want to be my "friend" on MySpace.
I learned that Kristin and Cory follow a grueling schedule of promoting, singing and modeling - both locally and internationally. Later this month they're going to New York as finalists on "American's Got Talent," and then jetting off to the Bahamas for a lingerie shoot.
In person, you realize that Kristin and Cory are definitely not your stereotypical twig-thin models. They look healthy and strong, thanks to this philosophy:
If you starve yourself, your body will eat your hard earned muscles-
meaning you’re left with no abs! You must eat enough calories to
keep your muscle- BUT the right kinds of healthy food. Eat every 2- 3 hours... Never eat under 1,200 calories, or else your metabolism WILL slow down
resulting in looking "watery." Plus if you
don’t eat enough calories, you will feel drained and have no energy-
AND why would you want to live life like that!
That's from a very long and detailed fitness section on their blog, and I was extremely impressed by their advice. They told me personal training runs in the family. As a result, their routine is practical, no-nonsense and gimmick-free that obviously provides results.
"Yoga and pilates are actually too easy for us," Cory said. "Kristin and I like
to sweat."
What are they working on?
"Everybody loves our abs," Cory said. "But our arms are puny. So that's our
next goal."
Of course, I had to tell them all about the push-up throwdown. And -- casually stretching arms, off-handedly flexing muscles -- how many I could do now.