Watch Kevin Hart Try to Keep Up With a High School Cross Country Team Nevertheless, on November 5, the 38-year-old fully intends to cross the finish line of the. He’s training how a Nike-sponsored, internationally touring comedian, CEO, author, moonlighting rapper, producer, and movie star trains for a marathon.
So, basically, that means he trains whenever he has time—and he doesn’t have much.
These Are the Worlds Fastest Marathoners New York City Marathon, his first crack at the distance. He hopes to do this despite the fact that he is not following any plan, is in the midst of launching his own streaming service called Laugh Out Loud Network, and is filming his next movie.
We know what you may be thinking, but this is no comedic stunt or effort to contrive nipple-chafing jokes. Hart simply wants to prove to himself, and his millions of fans, that he can do this.
He does have running experience. Two years ago during his countrywide comedy tour, he hosted pop-up 5Ks, Whats a Good Beginner Marathon Time record-breaking Appalachian Trail thru-hike in Oregon, where he ran 18 miles within 24 hours.
RELATED: New York City Marathon Hood to Coast from Runner’s World.
For NewYork, Hart is running based on how he feels, squeezing in two runs on weekdays, and trying for a long run on weekends. (He hopes to run an 18-miler at least once before the race.)
On a sunny September afternoon, at a park in Redondo Beach, California, Hart dons skin-tight black leggings under black running shorts Watch Kevin Hart Try to Keep Up With a High School Cross Country Team workout of the day. His first came early in the morning, which millions of fans already know, because he’s posted videos of the weightlifting session to Snapchat and Instagram. It’s something the comedian does often, time-stamping the clips to show off the obscenely early hour that he’s awake and putting in work.
How to Break 4 Hours in the Marathon high school cross-country team. They’re doing an interval workout: a mile warmup, two 800s, then two 400s. Three cameramen are staked out along the dusty, extremely hilly trails.
RELATED: through heaving breaths, he jokes, These kids are on steroids
In a week and a half, the video will be cut down to less than two minutes and posted to Hart’s Instagram account We may earn commission from links on this page, but we only recommend products we back.
He could easily shoot a few takes, shake some kids’ hands, and move on. People would understand. This is, after all, his first of three photo shoots in the day. Instead, Hart earnestly tries to hang with the lithe, swift teenagers. He mostly doesn’t. At the top of a particularly steep hill, through heaving breaths, he jokes, “These kids are on steroids.”
He’s one of the last to finish the final 400, grimacing in a full sprint as the team applauds. It’s a tenacious scene that will make you believe that one of the world’s most famous comedians really can juggle his career while becoming a marathoner—training plans be damned.
Here, Hart tells us, in his own words, how and why he plans to do it.
“During a long run, there is no thinking. I’m zoned out in a good space with great music—everything from slow music to R&B to country to rock ’n’ roll.”
“When you do go through that pain where you are getting sore, a lot of people back off. But I think it is about getting your body used to that feeling. When I first ran 10 miles, I was like, ‘Oooh, wait a minute.’ On my next five-mile run two days later, my body was like, ‘Kev, is this going to be a thing? Okay.’ So as you dig deeper, your body gets accustomed to it.”
“I am doing this to be an example that you can be anything that you put your mind to. I put my mind to it, and I am going to get it done. That simple.”
“Some of my greatest ideas happen during my runs. The peace that comes from running is the perfect time to be creative. My comedy is really my life experience, so I am sure I will find something funny about this marathon to talk about.”
“Kevin Harts First Marathon Is No Joke.”
“I haven’t chafed. I am not sure where it is supposed to happen. But I would appreciate not being jinxed. Where do you chafe at? I am not putting lube on my butt.”
“What is motivating me? I think the fact that people are really following my journey and saying, ‘That’s dope that Kevin is going to do what he is doing.’ I have to finish for them.”
“When I cross the finish line, I am probably going to…What is that called? Oh yeah, throw up. And then sit down.”
“I don’t even know what the wall is. [Hart is told what the wall is.] That ain’t going to happen. It’s mental, man. All mental. Mark that down.”
“I don’t have a fueling strategy. I want to relish the pain of the process, naturally. Mind you, I say that now. Have some energy gels Shoes & Gear.”
“My goal is to run it in 3:40 to 3:45.”
“I don’t get nervous. There is no such thing. As long as I s--t before the race, I will be fine.”
Kit has been a health, fitness, and running journalist for the past five years. His work has taken him across the country, from Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, to cover the 2016 Olympic Trials to the top of Mt. Katahdin in Maine to cover Scott Jurek’s record-breaking Appalachian Trail thru-hike in 2015.