The common elements of Firms, Fitprimes, and TLPs: it's all highly choreographed strength training (though newer Firms are much less choreographed than Anna Benson Firms), mixing things up with the training of different body parts and activities (like cardio and weights), and lots of equipment changes and transition of activities between songs.
Firms are mostly just a combination of basic strength training and cardio. Nothing too fancy I don't think, though I haven't seen BSS3.
TLPs are functional fitness. The fundamental difference as far as I see it is that you train your body more for specific movements than you are just simply targeting muscle groups. They involve many large range of motion moves, with lots of rotation for the core, hips, and shoulders. Lots of moves involve multiple muscle groups, some with multi-planar movements (like simultaneously lunging forward and twisting your torso to the side). Balance is also challenged a lot, which brings into function more of the smaller, oft-neglected stabilizer muscles. I see the 1st three TLPs as more pure functional training. The Tracie-led Yorktowns are aptly named "Functional Foundations"; the moves themselves aren't really that functional (as compared to the 1st set), but they specifically target training of the smaller underutilized muscles that are so important for functional fitness.
Fitprimes are hardest to classify in a neat category. I see them as mostly strength or AWT training, but they adopt moves from many other disciplines into their routines like yoga, pilates, ballet, and functional fitness.
Both Fitprimes and TLPs are high on the innovative/weirdness scale, depending on your point of view. They are workouts which are often hard to "get" the first time you do them and are more of an acquired taste. I totally love the TLPs, and appreciate new things about them each time I do them. The only FPs I really like are Steamin Cardio and Strong Bear. I just find Anna Benson's choreography style more gimmicky than effective. I know others find her unique style very motivating, but for me she fuses too many different elements together in a way that just doesn't work well.
Janet
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