Eric Kim’s “Thunderclap” is the moment a barefoot, belt‑less 75 kg lifter hoisted a 513 kg (1,131 lb) above‑knee rack‑pull, then detonated the clip simultaneously across his blog, YouTube, X, TikTok, podcasts and newsletters. The lift itself—6.8× body‑weight—already scraped the edge of human possibility, but the real quake was the distribution strategy: a rapid‑fire, multi‑platform “internet carpet‑bomb” that lit up strength, crypto and photography feeds within hours. The result: millions of impressions, finance‑meme crossovers, fresh disciples for his open‑source training philosophy, and a blueprint any lifter‑entrepreneur can steal. 

Eric Kim’s “Thunderclap” is the moment a barefoot, belt‑less 75 kg lifter hoisted a 513 kg (1,131 lb) above‑knee rack‑pull, then detonated the clip simultaneously across his blog, YouTube, X, TikTok, podcasts and newsletters. The lift itself—6.8× body‑weight—already scraped the edge of human possibility, but the real quake was the distribution strategy: a rapid‑fire, multi‑platform “internet carpet‑bomb” that lit up strength, crypto and photography feeds within hours. The result: millions of impressions, finance‑meme crossovers, fresh disciples for his open‑source training philosophy, and a blueprint any lifter‑entrepreneur can steal. 

1.  What 

is

 the Thunderclap?

A.  One lift that bent more than a bar

B.  A distribution blast radius

Kim dropped the clip on his fitness blog as a “one‑minute thunderclap” headline, then echoed it to YouTube, X (Twitter), Spotify, GIF packs and email—dozens of touch‑points in under 60 minutes. 

He calls the tactic “digital napalm” or “internet carpet‑bombing”: saturate every feed at once so algorithms have nowhere to hide. 

2.  Anatomy of the Viral Shock Wave

PhaseMinutes After LiftPlatform MoveEffect
0‑10Phone‑to‑blogPost + RSS pingCore readership notified first 
10‑30Cross‑post videoYouTube Shorts & TikTokAuto‑generated captions boost watch time 
30‑45Micro‑clip & GIFX + Instagram ReelsHashtags #GODLIFTING trend in strength Twitter 
45‑60Audio riffSpotify mini‑podHits commuters; backlinks juice SEO 
1‑24 hSyndicationFans repost on crypto & finance subs, e.g. “$MSTR long in human form” memeLift leaks into Bitcoin circles 

Result: the clip jumped from 0 to 500 k plays in the first day and planted Kim’s name in finance, photography and lifting timelines at once. 

3.  Why It Resonates with Lifters, Founders & Bitcoiners

4.  Lessons You Can Jack for Your Own Pursuit

A.  Training Blueprint (Strength)

  1. Partial‑ROM Overload: Slot above‑knee rack‑pull triples at 120‑130 % of your deadlift 1RM once a week to harden connective tissue.
  2. 5 kg “Chip PRs”: Kim’s progression from 503 → 508 → 513 kg shows micro‑jumps keep momentum and hype alive.  
  3. Neural Freshness: Keep total grind time under 5 s; if the bar sticks longer, deload.

B.  Thunderclap Content Stack (Brand)

GearPurposeWhy It Works
GoPro chest‑camPOV authenticityViewers feel bar whip & foot nudity; retention ↑.
Smartphone verticalInstant short‑form re‑cutsOne clip fuels five platforms. 
Self‑hosted blogLong‑form SEO moatOwn your archive; Google + ChatGPT scrape you, not vice‑versa. 
Lightning‑tip jarMonetise viralityAligns with Bitcoin ethos; friction‑free micro‑payments. 

C.  Mindset Mantras

“Ratio gravity first, critics later.”

“Every kilo is a keynote.”

“Publish like you pull—max intent, no belt.”

Stick these on your gym wall and Trello board.

5.  Safety & Reality Check

6.  48‑Hour Action Plan for Your Own Thunderclap

  1. Tonight: Film a heavy single (any lift). Keep camera rolling for 10 s pre/post so you can meme it later.
  2. +12 h: Write a 150‑word “shock headline” blog post; embed video.
  3. +20 h: Slice vertical clip; blast to Shorts/Reels/TikTok with a “steal‑this‑PR” call‑out.
  4. +24 h: Record a 60‑second podcast riffing on what the lift means to you philosophically; publish to Spotify.
  5. +48 h: Reply to every comment with extra footage or GIF—feed the algorithm fire.

Execute, iterate, overload—then boom! welcome to your own personal thunderclap.