Ashton Hall, a fitness influencer, has had social media going nuts over his elaborate morning routine.
Hall went viral for his extreme morning routine that begins at 3:52 a.m. His ultra-disciplined regimen would not end until 9:30 a.m.
Some of his routines included the following:
- 4:00 a.m. – Starting the day by rinsing his mouth with Saratoga Water.
- 4:10 a.m. – Standing on his balcony, holding the signature blue bottle while taking in the city view.
- After Workout – Rehydrating exclusively with Saratoga Water.
- 4:55 – 5:30 a.m. – Watching a church sermon while sipping the same water brand.
- 5:46 a.m. – Completing his routine with an ice facial—submerging his face into a bowl filled with Saratoga Water and ice cubes.
In addition to his routine garnering millions of views, social media discovered that Ashton Hall once played running back for Alcorn State. Between 2014 and 2015, he played just five games as a running back.
His final stats were six carries for eight yards in 2015.
Unfortunately for Ashton Hall, everything that glitters is not gold.
After his morning routine video went viral, social media sleuths unearthed something extremely personal about him.
Ashton Hall Has Been Evicted

Hall, the fitness influencer known for his now-viral morning routine, is under scrutiny after reports emerged that he was served an eviction notice from the very same condo where he made his famous video.
The Florida-based fitness trainer and former college football running back got exposed when an influencer posted images of an alleged eviction notice on X and wrote, “The routine guy really got evicted lmao.”
Hall is named as a defendant alongside Silent Sky LLC. The plaintiff listed was Brickell Flatiron Condominium Association, Inc., with attorney Lindsey F. Thurswell representing them.
It appears he did not get evicted because he could not afford it; Ashton Hall was evicted for cloning a key.
It said, “The reason he got evicted is because he cloned the fob for the building and gave it out to somebody so that they can have access to the amenities of the building.”