PlyoJam class offers a host of physical benefits

Tuesday, September 20, 2016
PlyoJam class offers a host of physical benefits
Bone density, calorie burning and increase muscle tone are all benefits of utilizing plyometric moves, and it's especially good for women entering menopause.

BRENTWOOD, LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- It looks like a typical Los Angeles dance class, but instructor Jason Layden makes sure there is something special going on.

"I weave in the jump training, just enough. It's like hiding vegetables from a baby," said Layden, creator of PlyoJam.

Plyo, short for plyometrics, is an extremely popular fitness concept that offers a host of physical benefits.

"Bone density, toning, calorie spikes," he said.

Bone density being a big one, especially for perimenopausal and menopausal women needing to maintain their power and strength.

"And I said, 'Let's create something that's really going to help people burn calories and dance.' And that's really where the idea of plyometrics jump training came," added Layden.

In a one-hour PlyoJam class, each song features a few plyo moves to get in that jump training.

Ski jumps and one-eighties are just two kinds of power moves, but if you're a low impacter, anybody can do it.

"In every routine they show the modifications first because when I first started, I couldn't jump at all," said Carrie Murray of Encino.

Murray lost 35 pounds of baby weight this past year by attending class three days a week.

"People of all ages come - from teenagers to 70-year-old women," said student Britta Slinger, of Santa Monica.

Slinger, who calls herself a non-dancer, loves the challenge.

PlyoJam is offered throughout L.A. at select dance studios. Layden offers teacher training and online training workshops for interested instructors nationwide.

An average, class costs between $15 and $20.