Saved clips are ingredients, not a meal. The lifters who get results aren't the ones with the most saves — they're the ones who can assemble a session in 60 seconds. Here's how.
Step 1: Pick today's muscle group(s)
Decide what you're training — push, pull, legs, or a single muscle group. This is your filter. Open only the saved clips tagged for it instead of scrolling everything.
Step 2: Filter by the equipment you'll have
At a packed gym or a home setup, narrow to dumbbells, cables, or whatever's free. Now every clip in front of you is something you can actually do. (Deep dive: find workouts by equipment.)
Step 3: Use a simple session template
Don't overthink it. A reliable full session is:
- 1 compound (a big multi-joint lift) — 3–4 sets
- 2 accessories (from your saved clips) — 3 sets each
- 1 finisher (that ab or burnout clip you saved) — 1–2 sets
Pull one saved clip for each slot and you have a complete workout in under a minute.
Step 4: Hit the right weekly volume
Health guidelines recommend training all major muscle groups at least twice a week. Rotate your saved clips across sessions so each muscle group comes up twice — your library makes this easy to see.
Step 5: Keep what works, cut what doesn't
After a session, the exercises that felt great stay in rotation; the rest get dropped. Over a few weeks your library becomes your program — built from clips you actually trust, which is exactly what helps you stick with it.
The catch: this only works if your saves are organized. If yours are a mess, start with organizing your saved reels.
From saved clips to a real session.
Filter by muscle group + equipment and build today's workout in seconds.
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