The Dark Direction of Bodybuilding.

drtbear1967

Musclechemistry Board Certified Member
The Dark Direction of Bodybuilding!

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by Anders JP Eskilsson

Competitive Pro Bodybuilding is undergoing some serious transformations at this point in time. The open division has been critiqued for more than ten years by a vast majority of the bodybuilding community. And we all know the opinions of the critique such as “Lacks in conditioning,” “Distended bellies,” “The 90’s was so much better,” “No real work ethic,” and the beat goes on.


In addition to the progress or decline of the fitness industry, new categories like Men’s Physique and the latest edition to the NPC/IFBB – Classic Physique (CPD) has been created for the future as an alternative to the original division of bodybuilding. As many of us know, the criteria of CPD will give preference to the more balanced and aesthetically pleasing type of physiques; a choice which is opening up to becoming a more mainstream division along with MPD. In return the categories might have the possibility to reach out further beyond the walls of the fitness industry compared to the original division of bodybuilding. By promoting a more downsized and achievable look CPD will become more mainstream and might gain more competitors to the stages, plus attract more business opportunities and which also means the federation earns more money.


However, on a sad note, and this is inevitable, by focusing on these new physical values and partially moving away from bodybuilding standards, the old school ideals of becoming an icon bodybuilder like a Ronnie Coleman or a Jay Cutler and implementing their kind of work ethic into becoming the best bodybuilder the world has ever seen; those core ideals will be lost in the evolutionary process of turning mainstream.


At the same time, the new categories might in one way be a necessary path to follow for the IFBB to continue to be vital and growas an organization in the long run. On the other hand the consequences will definitely cause the fundaments of competitive bodybuilding to shatter and decline, due to the new priorities.
Another result of the federation going mainstream will be the possibility of more business persons without any passion for bodybuilding or even fitness will be drawn to the industry, due to commercial possibilities. Company owners, directors, promoters who actually don’t knows shit about real bodybuilding or even care about it, but sees the dollar signs in the situation before anything else. Bodybuilding, as many other forms of industries, is dependent on passion to deliver sustainability and a qualitative output. So when the new investors will get more power; well then the competitive bodybuilding community is really endangered.
Nevertheless, even if the original perspectives of bodybuilding are diminishing due to all the changes going on, there are still some positive points to make. The industry has a few promising newcomer pros like Justin Compton, Cody Montgomery, and Zane Watson, and amateurs like Regan Grimes or Christopher Bumstead. These are all young guys on the rise who are giving it all to go all the way to the Olympia stage. Still, these new editions of athletes are still too few to generate a real re-growth or to speak about a genuine new wave of competitors arriving. I believe that this generation of gifted and passionate ‘original bodybuilders’ might be the last we´ll ever see.


In the end, I still believe that the origins of the culture will survive in one form or another, but the commercial side – by dividing the sport into seemingly ever more specific categories – maycontinue to diminish things, with more pros losing business opportunities such as supplement contracts, sadly enough.

At the same time, people who loves the cold concrete floor gyms, with solid steel machines, and heavy, well-beaten dumbbells; with walls covered with pictures of bodybuilding legends like Yates or Coleman, and old boom blasters playing Metallica’s “Master of Puppets” to set the tone of their workout or life in general. Those who love the core of gym training and building muscles freed from primitive commercialism, they will always survive, because in the end, the subculture of bodybuilding, is something no one can take away from them.
 
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I wrote the same thing in essence about 10 years ago, and I was half right and wrong lmao

I thought mens physique wouldnt last long, and wouldnt save bodybuilding as bodybuilding was dying long before Mens Physique came onto the scene, I know some younger guys think Mens Physique is what gave bodybuilding such a huge blow in popularity, when in fact it was nothing more than bodybuilding imploding on itself or rather exploding as thats what happened, guys getting way to big, stupid freaks, coupled with Media Attention.

I also remember the very first day it started, NOT sure how many of you remember this, but this is the very moment it all started:

January 20th 2004
George Bush State of the Union Address Which Was televised live on every major network channel he goes into the abuse of Steroids, Steroid Use in Sports, and How Steroids Is Corrupting Our Youth.

Back then I watched live, it blew my mind what I was hearing come out of his mouth during The State of the Union Address. However, looking back on it, he knew then what we all know now, and thats the media have no focus, and they will likely now start going after steroids, athletes essentially, rather than concentrate on the war at hand in the Middle East, or the billions of dollars that went missing on pallets, and in over billing by Halliburton for the food contract they had with the Military, or that the Vice President sat on the board of Halliburton at some point lol,

So thats when bodybuilding started to wither away lol,

Old Georgy Boy didnt care too much about steroids in sports when he was an Owner and Managing General Partner of the Texas Ranger , who’s all star roster of Jose Conseco, Rodriguez, Gonzalez, and Palimero all steroid using, and multiple positive steroid tests between them and still allowed to play, and smash that long ball that bring in the big money to the owners lmao


Anyhow, Jan 20th 2004 is when it all began to come crashing down in bodybuilding, but it was half self inflicted due to the size game, and fuck aesthetics thinking came to be, you know the Marcus RHUL Era lmao


Anyhow, bodybuilding will never die, I use to think it was dead or close to dead, but its been through a lot and still here, and lets face it, who doesn’t love muscle!
 
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