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  2. Stop Doing the Decline Bench Press. Train Your Chest With ...

    www.aol.com/stop-doing-decline-bench-press...

    Try these 3 chest-building exercises instead. The decline bench press is an exercise that purportedly targets your lower chest, but it's overrated. Try these 3 chest-building exercises instead.

  3. The Best Dumbbell Exercises to Sculpt a Superhero Chest - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/best-dumbbell-exercises...

    Dumbbell Incline Press. Why: The incline press will target your upper chest by opening up the angle of tension. How to Do It: Lay down on the bench. Press your feet to the floor, and drive your ...

  4. 12 exercises to tone your chest and improve posture - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/10-chest-exercises-tone-upper...

    Learn the best chest exercises at home using bodyweight and dumbbells for an upper-body workout to target the pectoral muscles and armpit fat, improve posture.

  5. List of weight training exercises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_weight_training...

    The chest fly is performed while lying face up on a bench or standing up, with arms outspread holding weights, by bringing the arms together above the chest. This is a compound exercise for the pectorals. Other muscles worked include deltoids, triceps, and forearms. Equipment: dumbbells, cable machine or "pec deck" machine.

  6. Bench (weight training) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bench_(weight_training)

    Typical consumer-level weight bench with leg exercise attachment Two weight training benches in a fitness center in Nürnberg, Germany Hyper bench for hyperextension Negative bench or decline bench. A weight training bench is a piece of exercise equipment used for weight training. Weight training benches may be of various designs: fixed ...

  7. Step aerobics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Step_aerobics

    Step aerobics was studied by physiologists in the 1980s, and in 1990 it swiftly grew in popularity in the U.S. as a style of health club exercise, largely because of promotion by Reebok of the Step Reebok device and associated exercise routines, prominently advocated by Gin Miller. Step aerobics attracted more men to group exercise classes. [2]