Dom Joly: Fight on the beaches? Gym'll fix it
I just remembered what happened when I was rude about Greco-Roman Wrestling at the Beijing Olympics
Latest in Dom Joly
Opinion blogs
Circular firing squad at a crossroads
Politico has identified seven dreadful clichés of campaigning in and commenting on the Republican pr...
Reminders of Iraq
I was sorry to learn from Paul Waugh of the death of Brian Jones, the former Defence Intelligence Se...
Mervyn King is more than keeping up on Gilt purchases
The Bank of England is taking more UK government bonds out of the market each month than the Debt Ma...
I've never understood bodybuilding. Obviously, I understand the concept – scrawny, unhappy man gets sand kicked in his face by bullies and decides that this will never happen again. Scrawny man goes to gym, meets a curious mentor called Charles Atlas and starts spending inordinate time in said gym pumping iron and turning himself into a bulging human vein. If it was a movie, the ex-scrawny guy would return to the beach, pick up all the bullies at the same time and say something like: "Now I have your attention, I think you need to cool off..." and hurl them into the sea while beach babes in itsy-bitsy bikinis start stroking his pulsating breasts. This, basically, is the Arnold Schwarzenegger story, although I don't think there was too much beach life in Austria so maybe change the location to a strudel- baking camp.
What I don't get about bodybuilding is that, to me anyway, they don't look attractive. They're so hampered by their overdeveloped muscles that, as with Daleks, simply going up a couple of stairs would defeat them, so it can't be about being powerful. Women always say that they don't find these veiny hunks attractive, but that's probably the same thing as them claiming that the most attractive thing in a man is his sense of humour. I have found that to be complete bollocks as well.
It'll come as no surprise when I tell you that I have very little experience in the world of bodybuilding. The closest I ever came to it was in Costa Rica. I arrived in San Jose after missing my connecting flight from Miami due to an "internal examination" from overzealous immigration officials. As a consequence I'd lost my bag. I was off for five days in the rainforest and needed some clothes. It was a Sunday and almost everything was closed. My driver had a brainwave and told me that his gym sold clothes – so off we went. On arrival I realised that this wasn't really a gym – more a "body-sculpting studio" full of scrawny Costa Ricans dreaming of being sand-kickers on the beach. The "shop" as it was, was pretty limited. On one wall sat rows of huge plastic tubs that contained every steroid under the sun. On the other was an assortment of bodybuilding gear. I ended up in the middle of the rainforest, alone, wearing incredibly tight, shiny yellow shorts and a sleeveless blue singlet that accentuated all my bad features. Every morning at breakfast I would have to put up with the stares from the other residents who assumed I was a sex tourist.
Last night, as I was surfing the galaxy of channels available to the couch potato, I came across a competition for female bodybuilders. I'm sorry, but if the male version is wrong, the female version is totally wrong. It's not for me but, I can just about understand that some men might want to look like Conan The Barbarian, but what possesses a woman to want to look like that? One after the other, greased-up uber-ladies paraded about on the stage flexing their non-existent breasts. In fact, it all seems to come down to breasts. While the women lose whatever breastage they had, the men develop huge ones that they seem to enjoy make move of their own volition. Every time a breast does a little pump then a weird whoop comes from the audience. I'm trying to recollect whether the shop in Costa Rica had man bras because these seem to be an all too necessary accessory for the fashion conscious "pumper".
Enough... I'm nervous now. I just remembered what happened when I was rude about Greco-Roman Wrestling at the Beijing Olympics. It started quietly with the three wrestlers who could manage to work out how to email sending me abusive messages, but then it got weird. An effigy of myself in a leotard being throttled by a handbag was left in my garden. I was never sure if the handbag was a sign of my supposed homosexuality or whether it's a recognised "kill" move in afternoon wrestling.
What can I expect from the bodybuilding community? Is there a bodybuilding community? That would be a frightening place to be a resident in. Imagine the neighbour disputes. Two men in tiny shorts and ripped to the tits on steroids, kicking off because one has borrowed the other's olive oil and not returned it. I'd better get ready – where's Charles Atlas's telephone number?
Armstrong's spoke sets wheels on fire
Change of Sporting Tweet Watch – this week it's Lance Armstrong... yey!!! Here he is tweeting about a bicycle race: "At one point today we reached 110kph. That's almost 70 mph. CRAZY!"
Crazy indeed.
- 1 Matthew Norman: There's always the Human Rights Act, Trevor
- 2 Mark Steel: If religion is 'marginal', I'm the Pope
- 3 Hamish McRae: Living standards will start to get better sooner than you think
- 4 Christina Patterson: The struggle against police racism has just got a lot harder
- 5 Kate Allen: It's time for America to put an end to this shameful scandal
- 6 The Daily Cartoon
- 7 Dominic Lawson: Spare me these orgies of self-congratulation
- 1 Spotify: 1 million plays, £108 return
- 2 How Koscielny became prince of the Emirates
- 3 Apple admits it has a human rights problem
- 4 Mark Steel: If religion is 'marginal', I'm the Pope
- 5 No secularism please, we're British
- 6 Lightning kills an entire football team
- 7 Matthew Norman: There's always the Human Rights Act, Trevor
- 8 Special report: The hungry generation
- 9 I was born to be a killer. Every night I see the Devil in my dreams
- 10 Six Grammys, five years off: Adele puts love before career
Free trial of new Independent iPad app
Get your daily dose of the best of British journalism, sponsored by American Airlines
Win a three-week coastal jaunt
Spend three weeks exploring every nook and cranny of gorgeous Atlantic Canada.
Amazing restaurant offers
Three glasses of free champagne and a special menu at 46 top London restaurants.
Latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Day In a Page
How an abortion divided America
Did they all live happily ever after? That's up to you...




Comments