From 
strength villian. this is how im progressing my burpees. I think doing 100 straight up is too much.
Challenge #1 is an old Greyskull standard, and here it is.
 
100 Burpees in 5 minutes.
 We all know the burpee. It is a terrible calisthenic movement that  elicits a very shitty systemic feeling when performed quickly and for  high reps. Accomplishing 100 of these nasty SOB’s in 5 minutes means  holding a 1 Burpee every 3 second pace or better for 5 minutes.
 An overweight and or out of shape individual could begin by doing 3  or 4 sets of 5, with the goal being to accomplish the sets in less than  15 seconds per. Once they can do that, they would add a few reps, trying  for sets of 7 or 10. Each time the time goals are made across the  board, they would add repetitions per set.
 A more in shape individual might begin with sets of 20 to be done in 1  minute, or even (as I would advise) sprint sets of 10 to be  accomplished in 30 seconds or less.
 The simple goal formula is: #of Burpees x 3= Target in seconds
 The idea here is consistency, working towards a goal over time. This  is something that can be trained daily, as in 7 days per week. How much  do you honestly think your strength training will be affected by 3 sets  of 10 burpees? I would have you do this after your weight training on  training days, and on all of the other days in between with the  understanding that missing a day here or there certainly isn’t the end  of the world. After all it is what we do most of the time that matters,  not what we do some of the time.
Ask yourself, what do you think the cumulative effect of the work  necessary day in, day out, to knock this goal off of the list will be on  your cardiovascular health/fitness/conditioning? What about your body  composition? Do you think that your body will look exactly the same as  it does now once you can accomplish this goal, assuming you are a ways  off? I often tell beginner trainees desiring more upper body development  that when they can bench press 100 pounds more than they can currently  they will look like a guy who benches 100 pounds more than they do  currently. The same goes here. Consistent effort towards the goal over  time is hands down the most important variable in training as well as in  many other aspects of life.
 This challenge is an example of the villain mentality as it applies  to training. Eat lots of good food, lift heavy weights, chin, dip,  condition with calisthenics and other methods, and you will in time take  on the appearance of a guy or gal who consistently does all of the  above mentioned things. You do not have to be fat and sloppy to be  strong. To quote my friend Anthony Roberts, we are about building “a  nation of linebackers”.