Peloton founder reveals he starts his day 'rehydrating' by drinking 40 sips of water from his hand at his $7.5million Manhattan apartment until he feels 'like throwing up'

 Co-founder and CEO of Peloton John Foley has revealed that he starts his mornings by drinking 40 sips of water from his hand out of the bathroom sink until he feels like throwing up.

Foley, 49, told the New York Times in a profile about his typical Sunday that he began the practice 20 years ago after a colleague told him that hydration is the key to a good day.

He also revealed how he spends time on Sunday mornings perfecting the light in his kitchen with 14 dimmer switches before running on one of his company's treadmills, which he says he has crammed in his second bathroom as it was the only place it would fit.

Home workout company Peloton was founded in 2012 by Foley with his friends and co-founders Graham Stanton, Hisao Kushi, Tom Cortese, and Yony Feng.

The company's stationary bike - which retails from $1,895 - has become wildly popular amid the coronavirus pandemic, as gym closures have forced many Americans to start working out at home. 

Foley, pictured with his wife Jill and their children Quinn and Mae, became a newly minted billionaire this year as demand for Peloton products spiked during the COVID-19 lockdowns

Foley, pictured with his wife Jill and their children Quinn and Mae, became a newly minted billionaire this year as demand for Peloton products spiked during the COVID-19 lockdowns

Foley had lived in a penthouse in this West Village building which he attempted to sell for $7.5million in 2013 after he and his wife spent more than a million renovating

Foley had lived in a penthouse in this West Village building which he attempted to sell for $7.5million in 2013 after he and his wife spent more than a million renovating

Foley, who was born in Florida, began his career as an engineer in 1990 for Mars Inc. in 1990. According to the New York Times profile, he had previously put himself through college working nights at a Skittles factory.

The Harvard Business School graduate later helped to build CitySearch.com before becoming CEO of Evite.com, Co-founder and CEO of Pronto.com, and President of ecommerce at Barnesandnoble.com, where he helped launch the Nook e-reader.

He left Barnes & Noble in 2012 to start up Peloton on New York City after family life left it difficult for him to enjoy the boutique fitness classes he loved and he decided to find a way to bring them into the home.

According to Bloomberg, he initially posted a video to Kickstarter in 2013 which raised him $307,000 to get the company off the ground. 


In the beginning, Foley also personally pushed the bikes, spending Sundays in Short Hills Mall in New Jersey trying to sell them, according to the Times.

He told Master of Scale in August that he spent the first three years pitching the company to thousands of investors, but nobody was interested.

'No investors wanted to look at this thing. They wanted nothing to do with it,' he said.

'They couldn't understand how we'd possibly be able to build the bikes, deliver them, produce the tablet software and then create the content, all by ourselves,' he also told the Wall Street Journal in 2018.

Foley, pictured, with his wife Jill, came up with the idea for Peloton after the couple struggled to get to boutique classes after having children. They are pictured with their son Quinn who is now 12

Foley, pictured, with his wife Jill, came up with the idea for Peloton after the couple struggled to get to boutique classes after having children. They are pictured with their son Quinn who is now 12

Yet having sold its first bike in 2013, Peloton now has more than 2.6 million members and 3,500 employees worldwide. 

And once the pandemic hit and demand skyrocketed, Foley found himself a newly minted billionaire by September.

Bloomberg now estimates that he is worth $1.2 billion, his wealth having tripled this year. He owns 8 percent of stock in the company.

The former engineer now lives in the West Village with his wife Jill, 42, their son Quinn, 12, and daughter Mae, 9.

They had previously listed a home in the area for $7.5million, according to Curbed.  

Jill, who is the company's vice president of apparel, said the idea for the company had come up because she and her husband were 'addicted to fitness'.

'Our first dates were centered around fitness—running, indoor cycling, surfing, yoga, boot camps, etc.,' she told Heymama.

'We loved the way we felt after a high-energy, instructor-led interval training class.'

However, once they started having kids, their lifestyles and jobs became more demanding.

'We found it hard to get to these classes and we actually would get in arguments about whose turn it was to work out!

'So, one day, John came home and said, 'I have a great idea!' What if you could get a high-energy, instructor-led interval training class in your own home!? Working out at home was traditionally so boring and not very effective', she said.

John Foley is pictured with his wife Jill who is the company's vice president of apparel

John Foley is pictured with his wife Jill who is the company's vice president of apparel

On Friday, it was announced that Peloton was joining the Nasdaq 100 index and its stocks enjoyed a boost from the inclusion on Monday.

The company's sales have grown by 172 percent this year as its stationary bike became wildly popular when coronavirus-related gym closures forced many Americans to start working out at home.

The company halted their own lives classes for a while in April after an employee in the New York City studio contracted COVID-19 and members urged for them to be shut down to keep the instructors safe.

This year's meteoric rise came just months after the company lost $942million market value in a single day after its 2019 holiday advertisement sparked fierce social media backlash.

The exercise equipment company was vilified over the commercial titled 'The Gift That Gives Back', which shows a woman receiving a stationary bike from her husband on Christmas morning.

She then documents her year-long fitness journey in a series of selfie clips that she compiles into a thank you video for her husband.

Peloton release Christmas 2019 advert for exercise bike
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The 2019 holiday commercial was slammed by viewers on social media

The 2019 holiday commercial was slammed by viewers on social media

Viewers trashed the ad on social media, calling it sexist, misogynistic, humiliating and cringeworthy.

Before this, Peloton shares had risen steadily through November 2019 in anticipation of a strong holiday season. The company had gained almost 10 percent just the week before after strong Black Friday sales.

The company's stock fell 9.12 percent just two days after the commercial's debut and dropped the market cap to around $9.4billion.

Shares would continue to fall in early December after Citron RESEARCH, an online stock commentary website, claimed in a report that the firm is worth $1billion rather than the $8.8billion they claimed.

The report found that Peloton's true stock price should be just $5 per share by 2020, a dramatic drop of 85 per cent, and it could be worth as little as $1bn.

It based the downgrade on the fact that other manufacturers produce smart exercise bikes for just $500 and that existing bikes can be converted into Pelotons with a $12 attachment and the use of the firm's app.

Peloton's sales have grown by 172 percent this year as its stationary bike became wildly popular due to coronavirus-related gym closures. The company's stock price (pictured) stood at $121.91 after trading closed Monday - up 144 percent from mid-June

Peloton's sales have grown by 172 percent this year as its stationary bike became wildly popular due to coronavirus-related gym closures. The company's stock price (pictured) stood at $121.91 after trading closed Monday - up 144 percent from mid-June

It continued to climb further on Tuesday morning and opened at $122.01

It continued to climb further on Tuesday morning and opened at $122.01

The report also criticized the firm for charging customers who buy their exercise bike $39 dollars a month to access online classes - and only charging $12.99 for their app for people who don't own a Peloton.

And it called into question the reliability of CEO Foley who it said wrongly claimed the firm is profitable.

In February, before the pandemic hit, shares plunged as much as 12 percent further and Peloton reported a loss of 20 cents per share.

It came as the company was embroiled in a lawsuit with Flywheel Sports over patent infringements.

Peloton accused Flywheel Sports of infringing two patents, as well as copying their streaming service on bikes, right down to metrics model and display.

Ultimately, Flywheel sports was forced to stop offering its At Home service and gave customers one month to trade the $2,000 bikes for Peloton models.

After these losses, Peloton has since regained ground and continues to climb, yet this year has not been without its own setbacks.

The company's most famous product is a $1,895 stationary bike that has become wildly popular amid the coronavirus pandemic, as gym closures continued

The company's most famous product is a $1,895 stationary bike that has become wildly popular amid the coronavirus pandemic, as gym closures continued

On Monday, it was hit with a patent infringement lawsuit from a company credited with sparking the world's indoor cycling craze over a quarter of a century ago.

Mad Dogg Athletics (MDA), which brands itself as 'the creator of the Spinning and indoor cycling category', filed the lawsuit against Peloton in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas on Monday.

The suit alleges that Peloton infringed upon two of MDA's patents that are 'directed to core features of an exercise bike designed to bring the experience of an instructor-led class into the rider's home'.

Despite the suit, the Peloton's stock price stood at $121.91 after trading closed Monday - up 144 percent from June. It opened Tuesday morning at $122.01. 

Peloton has reportedly brought in revenue upwards of $1.8billion this year, and the company's daily stock price climbed above $100 in September.

The soaring demand during the holiday season has caused headaches for the company, however, as customers complain of months-long delays in deliveries that have caused some to cancel their orders and defect to rival brands such as SoulCycle.

Last month Peloton told The Wall Street Journal that the delays 'are primarily due to shipping logjams, particularly at ports as the bikes are transported to the US from manufacturers overseas'.

A spokeswoman stated: 'The wait times right now are not how we want people to experience Peloton'.

Peloton bosses stated in a recent letter to shareholders that they were 'doing everything we can to get our products to our prospective Members as quickly as possible'.

The company is set to grow even further next year as it releases a smaller, more affordable version of its treadmill, Tread, in March.

This treadmill will be marketed at $2,495, which is $1,500 less than the current model. 

Peloton founder reveals he starts his day 'rehydrating' by drinking 40 sips of water from his hand at his $7.5million Manhattan apartment until he feels 'like throwing up' Peloton founder reveals he starts his day 'rehydrating' by drinking 40 sips of water from his hand at his $7.5million Manhattan apartment until he feels 'like throwing up' Reviewed by Your Destination on December 16, 2020 Rating: 5

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