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Screen with you and we can get right started. Ok, great. So as always, what we are looking at in this class today is about the rise of the american obsession with fitness, withfitness culture, working out, even as the United States is not a particularly fit nation. And if anything in the past 75 to 100 years or so that we look at in this course, americans have become more and more obsessed with the idea of working out as a symbol or signal of individual virtue and morality even as the ability to do so and having a fit body has become another symbol of inequality in this country. That is the kind of overarching arc of the class. Today, we turn to the 1980s. So the name of the lecture is a quote from one of the oral histories that i have done for the Book Research im doing, on which this course is based. It is i would have been a pe teacher. We will get there to the end of class. I will tell you who said it, but that idea that in another historical moment, the people who became architects of the Fitness Industry would have been physical education teachers is a really important idea, particularly as we talk about the 1980s. Ok. So i would have been a pe teacher in 1980s fitness culture in the United States. I want to talk about the United States in the 1980s, broad really just Broad Strokes historical context. A lot of students, those of you watching on cspan, everybody are international so everybody has Different Levels of preparation and familiarity with u. S. History. I should also mention i say america there because even though i am a u. S. Historian, you all read jenny ellisons article about fat aerobics in canada in this period. I am always careful to bound my expertise in the United States, it is important throughout this class as we have been all semester to see which of these phenomena become transnational. And also, how they may look similar or different across national lines. We will start with top level context for america in the 1980s. Then we go to talk about the making of an industry. This drawing on the article you read by mark stern about the rise of the Fitness Industry from 1960 to 1980, talking in a little more detail what the aspect of that industry looked like and the way they shaped a workout culture. Then we will get to the quote which frames our talk today. I would have been a pe teacher. We will talk about a path not taken, the physical education track, and why a lot of these folks who became important in the Fitness Industry of the 1980s, why didnt they become pe teachers . It is not, like most historical phenomenon, merely a result of individual decisions, but there are structural factors at work. I am excited to get into that intersection because it is one of those cases, i did not anticipate that aspect of the story coming up in my research, but it started bubbling up from through oral histories and i willrchival work which talk about. At the end we always conclude, so what, why do we care . Why is this more than just a foray into the curiosity of fitness history . It is about more than that. Lets get started. Lets just recap a little bit of what we talked about last week. Lets recap what we talked about last week. There is a lot going on in the world. We talked about the 1960s and 1970s, an alternative perspective on what u. S. Historians refer to as Movement Culture, which is used to refer to find a political activism in that period from feminism, gay liberation, against the vietnam war, progressive political. What we did in that same period was to look at the way that is conventionally understood, shaped exercise period in that culture, and also expanded the definition of Movement Culture in the 1960s and 1970s to say lets talk about actual Movement Culture. What forms of exercise were taking hold in this time, and how were they shaped by that moment . One of the big things that transformed exercise in that era which will come up a lot is the introduction of what we know as cardio. Kenneth cooper published his book aerobics in 1968, he expanded the definition of exercise to be beyond calisthenics and which was how it was narrowly defined before. That revolutionized the definition of what exercise was and who could anticipate in it. Also the bodies it would create. We talked a little bit, dove into a case study of the rise of the jogging phenomenon and the idea of the open road, jogging as a quintessential form of cardio, seen as sort of objectively celebratory and helpful for the increasingly sedentary populace. We talked about the counterculture around that, jogging enthusiasts had about one person, one man and the open road, back to nature perspective, about a rejection of technology. This can be embodied by running. In a moment when exploration through mind altering substances was common, this idea of the runners high and the endorphins you could get naturally became part of jogging so to speak in that time. And then we talked about the simultaneous rise of studio fitness. At least promoted by women for women, although that has changed now. In that same time of the late 1960s, 1970s, you see the flourishing of studio based fitness workouts. Things that we will talk about in detail today, jazzercise founded in 1969 although it takes hold in the 1980s. The barre based workouts. The idea especially for women who are looked at askance, alone in the streets, exercising, the studio exercises created some safer spaces for women to exercise in a moment when exercise for women was becoming more widely accepted. There are a lot of contradictions which i will not rehash, but which i think will come up a little bit. Going ahead. This was the last one last week. This connection of jogging in the open road to gentrification, this arc from something seen as countercultural and materialistic to become something that might be part of the materialistic form of culture it was trying to critique. If you remember from last week, this is an article from 1980 the los angeles times. The croissant culture swallowing up the ghettos. We dont associate today, croissants with exercise culture, at the time it was a way of saying the affluent upwardly mobile professionals were gentrifying africanamerican neighborhoods and bringing with them all of their cultural tastes, one of them being croissants and jogging. Sports such as jogging is solitary, and breakfast places and cappuccino cafes, allow us to be around people without talking to them. Fast forward they talk about the other consumer items associated with people who once considered themselves countercultural sought out these what is perceived to be rougher neighborhoods as a part of that countercultural politics. Now jogging and the rest of these things, whole roasted coffee beans, fresh flower, the closing line is prescient urban neighborhoods are on the way to becoming homogenous with the suburbs we sweat. That is important. The way that privatization, capitalism, a corporatization of these movements ends up , i dont want to say pastor bastardizing them or destroying them, but they are still vibrant but which you cant deny are overwhelmingly privatized, available to private, those who can afford them, even if they were introduced with radical ideas in mind. This israel top level is real top level. Understanding the United States in the 1980s. That is a picture from the 1990 movie a bonfire in the vanities, a rendering of tom wolfs famous book about new york city in the 1980s. If you dont know that book, the novel, now is a good time to read it. The protagonist features himself a master of the universe. He is married to a thin, white woman. He gets into a car accident which enmeshes him in an africanamerican neighborhood which points out hypocrisy and social inequalities that exist in new york city and other cities in the u. S. At that time. That is an unsatisfying description of the movie. I cant include the image without telling you. But the key things that come out in that book, important to think about this era is the 1980s is a movement of backlash. It is a pendulum swing against the collective radical progressive politics which divine that era. Defined that era. Also when you both have on the level of government a kind of austerity policies, lots of funding programs. Whereas at the same time a kind of widespread dont want to say acceptance, acceleration of extravagance of individuals who can afford it. This was pointing out the hypocrisy. Some of you might know the movie wall street, the phrase greed is good, excess, fat cars, cocaine, lifestyles of the rich and famous, i would show you all these video clips, thats a of extreme wealth while at the same time social programs are being cut, that is very much part of the ethos as historians understand it. A lot of economics, social and racial inequality. I left a gender out on purpose because i want to talk about the way this time through fitness was a time when gender inequality continue to be challenged but also reinscribed by the fitness fascinations of the 1980s. Morning in america is Ronald Reagans 1984 president ial campaign slogan. I put a question mark there because for a lot of people it was not morning in america. The ascendant political and cultural conservatism particularly in the hivaids, which Ronald Reagan was late to acknowledge at all, all of that was not part of a dawning in america. It was one of the darkest times in the United States. It is important when we see images like this one i have put up here to realize all of that glitz and glamour which today is very much sort of like being reinvigorated in a retro celebration of the 80s, all of that was part of an era in which a lot of people suffered because of these policies. The last thing on there, after we had that croissant culture headline last week, it came to my attention some of you dont know what yuppies are. It came in use in the 1980s to refer to young urban professionals and all the things they liked to do like croissants and jogging. I was reading another thing like triathlons became big. A little bit of a play on hippies. It is often, it was used mockingly. These are people who are individualistic, to climb the ladder on their own. They are not that into collective progressive politics but personal advancement through climbing the ranks. I am leaving a lot out. We did not even talk about the cold war. These are the cultural themes which frame our discussion of fitness in the 1980s United States. So we have talked a significant amount about president ial fitness in this class and what was considered kind of appropriate for a public figure to participate in in terms of fitness. This is from the 1980s magazine spread, turning Ronald Reagans first term. That is president Ronald Reagan working out on a novelist machine. Nautilist machine. You have read a lot about the history of nautilus. You can see his personal exercise program. We will not do a analysis of this, but you are welcome to pause and zoom in at home. The image on the right of reagan chopping wood, that is totally of a piece with what we talked about earlier in the 20th century with teddy roosevelt, getting out in the great outdoors, celebrating the strenuous life of manly sport like chopping wood and horseback riding. There is continuity. At least two things i could really highlight, this is a different era. There is a joke in the caption where reagan says pumping firewood is what the president calls the activity of him splitting logs. That is a joke about pumping iron. The 1970s big bodybuilding flick starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, we talked about from the first day of class, brought this weird subculture of muscle head bodybuilders to the center of american popular culture, such that even the socially conservative president is making jokes about it. Remember when muscle beach was shut down for morals charges in the 1950s. That is the world Ronald Reagan came from. He was around in california in those days. I should say he was a democrat back then. That is a story for another day. The other thing i think is super interesting, the main photo for the piece, reagan on an exercise machine in the gym. That is not traditionally masculine Theodore Roosevelt kind of imagery. 1983, working out in a commercial gym, a straight man, a leader working on his body in this particular way is considered not at all to question his masculinity but rather to uphold it. This is a puff piece that came out in a moment where it is very clear that to be someone who goes to the gym is a positive. This is supposed to reflect positively on the president , and it did. By 1983 fitness in general is becoming not controversial and a celebrated virtue of such that someone like Ronald Reagan can do it and the more cultural bodybuilding figures who were considered to be rather suspicious. Lets keep going. I could spend a whole lecture talking about the founder of nautilus. There he is. I am not going to do so because you have a lot of about the founding of it in your reading by jonathan black. One of the things i think is important in looking at this moment and at this figure is the way in which machines shaped in this and the proliferation of exercise in the United States. When he went to i have a small tech right here. Sorry about that. When arthur joan, the father of nautilus, started lifting weights, he was horrified by the lack of efficiency in lifting traditional barbells. He set to work. He did not have much money back then. He set to work devising what he thought was a more efficient way to do Overall Health and fitness. What came out of that, a guy who was deeply skeptical, only had a ninth grade education himself, but he says a ninth grade education in the 1930s was as good as two phds today, he built the machines and engines, which are those machines, in order to increase weights, you would take out a little pin, put them in and raise the weight by putting the pin in different places. As you read in your text by jonathan black, he peddled this around at different tradeshows and it became the standard in gyms. That is important, making them the places where more people would exercise than hardcore bodybuilders. So this was a blessing to people because you did not have to heave around all of these plates. It revolutionized exercise. We have got to give him that. At the same time as you gathered from your reading as well, this is the part of his life i could spend so much time on, i did not mean to assign this reading when we were in the height of tiger king,session with tiger but he was a very joe exotic kind of figure. He was in to collecting big game. He had hundreds of elephants, reptiles, i believe he had bears. He was not a big cat guy, but he had hundreds of wild animals on his property in ocala, florida. He was a guy with contrarian ideas and was not afraid to share them. I will send around the link, but it is objectionable language. He had six wives until the end of his life. He continued to get married and get divorced. He married all of these women, i believe four of the six of them when they were under 20 years old. He called his fourth wife an old bag when she was 24. One interview, someone asked about women. He said i think they are great, everyone should own several of them. He had several really offensive ideas. That has made him unfortunately today a bit of a folk hero among some hardcore mens Rights Groups who see him as a guy speaking truth to power early and refused to bow to emerging ideas of what was not yet called Political Correctness but which came to be so. I could go on with lots of examples. For the mens rights, people celebrate him for those ideas. In fitness circles, in spite of those ideas, he is still celebrated as well. Some people will have the founder of h. I. T. , highintensity interval training. You see on fitness blogs everywhere, the focus on this hero in the Fitness Industry, without focusing on the objectionable things he said and did. One of the things i want to point out is it is often common in writing the history of any kind of period to focus only on the famous people. People call it a great man history. The focus on jones and his nautilus machines can err in that direction. One of the things i have been doing is asking people, how did nautilus change your life . What impacted jones and his innovations have on your life . One person i talked to, asked not to be included, but she became very famous in the fitness space and she started off selling machines for him because they are the best in the market. But actually when she went to visit him at his ranch in florida, she was so horrified by his racism and language that she actually left as a Sales Representative and left a lot of money on the table. Whenever you work out on the machines with the pins, it has this history you dont know. His son went on to develop hammer strand which is even more widespread brand you will see around. I dont believe his son shared those ideas. I will only attribute them to senior. So he invented nautilus. He comes from this macho background which is funny. He got in a lot of conflict with the traditional bodybuilders who saw this fancy new hightech machine as getting in the way of barbell heavy lifting jims. Gyms. He had that conflict with those guys. Even as he expanded who came into gyms, he was somebody who did not have any kind of progressive positive ideas as part of his mission at all. At the same time, the Fitness Industry is expanding in a different way. We talked about the founding of jazzercise and how this dancer , judy shepard, went to a ymca to get her fitness level tested. The fitness exam they had did not have metrics to measure a womans body. They were shocked that just a dancer could be such a powerful so strong. She goes on to create jazzercise, dance cardio format, which has an interesting business story which is not told. Jazzercise, dance cardio, it is mostly women, it is meant to enable women who might be self conscious about taking time for themselves to exercise, to free them from all that and move together for health and fitness. The business side of this, i think, is super interesting. Oh, no. I will have to go back to that one. Jazzercise becomes a franchise. It means individual people rather than working for jazzercise, inc. Or judy shepard, would go and pay a fee to start their own jazzercise businesses. By 1984, you can see by this clip, jazzercise is the second fastest franchise after dominos pizza. They might go handinhand. Quite a few fast food things are on there as well. One of the reasons this is important, the franchise model continues to be an important form of growth for the Fitness Industry and has been for a long time. But jazzercise franchisees are almost 100 women. So are the participants. It becomes part of this growing Fitness Industry where women are some of the prime movers here. I have interviewed people in and around the jazzercise world. One of the things that a lot of that they were women who were staying at home with their kids, or women between jobs because their husbands work or other family commitments. This allowed them to have economic selfdetermination and work and a sense of community while they attended to these other commitments. That falls out of the picture when we just think about leotards, legwarmers and the acidic of that period which was aesthetic of that period, which was cool. Out in the great man or great woman period of notory, just like jones was the only guy who made exercise equipment but judy shepard was not the only one doing dance cardio exercise. Jackie sorenson, the same year, creates something similar called aerobic dancing and becomes popular on the east coast and has classes at ymcas and all over the place. One of the things that is interesting about how these businesses came about some of they were living adjacent to military bases. Judy shepard relocated to San Diego County near the military base there. A lot of her students were military wives. They were often there because their husbands had been deployed, and in the shadow of this hyper masculine military complex, they find jazzercise. Many of them became certified instructors because when their husbands got reassigned, they did not want to lose their exercise. That is how that business spread throughout the world quickly. Jacki sorenson was also on a military base, in guam. It is in this article. She was an air force wife. It does not say where but i am positive it is guam. She too kind of was at the behest of her husbands schedule and work but created this Incredible Program but ended up mostly for women being a real source of selfaffirmation, exercise strength, etc. A lot of these programs even as i fully stand by the idea that these absolutely empowered women and created new opportunities, some of the language for the grossly obese, sorenson claims, aerobic dancing could be dangerous. There is a lot of weight loss talk. I think still today but even more so then, womens fitness was a form of weight loss rather than anything else. We have got the machine side of the industry, nautilus machines, lifecycle, the bikes, the pilates reformer in your reading, now you have studios and ymcas or within other gyms and health spas, the dance cardio stuff, but you have the rise of the health club and social club. This is interesting how fitness culture bounces in and out of art and reality. There was this story that ran in Rolling Stone called looking for mr. Good body. It was about a club in los angeles called the sports connection. Almost everybody i have interviewed for this project about who was in fitness in the 1980s mentions the sports connection. It was the place to be seen. It was a singles bar environment, they called it the sports erection. It was a new place. The idea that a gym was not a sweaty dungeon but where the Beautiful People hung out. It was a new idea, sort of a california idea. So this guy goes to california, new york gentleman, writes a story about it in Rolling Stone. It becomes a popular phenomenon, they make a movie about it called perfect. I recommend you all watch. It has a fulllength actual aerobics series in it. You can learn the choreography from watching it. And John Travolta and Jamie Lee Curtis star in it. These are the stars. It is really something. It gets kind of hand at the kind of panned at the box office, but in the 1980s there is in a fascination with the gym at the sports connection that there is a major feature film about it. There was a major regional aspect. The whole narrative is this kind of smart, savvy, new yorker goes out to california to learn what these brain dead fitness obsessed people are doing. Jamie lee curtis, the star even thoughtructor , she is really good at it, there is something wrong with her, she is damaged in some way. I suggest watching it just to , kind of wrap your head around a lot about the way the culture was seen. Some with suspicion but increasing fascination during that period. So what was most responsible probably or who, who and what were responsible for proliferating 1980s culture outside of brickandmortar gyms . Well they were booming from 1960 to 1990. The growth is exponential in the Fitness Industry. As you also know from that piece, what is happening in those clubs is changing, the professional Organization Goes from being called the racket and Sports Association to racket and health association. I forget the acronym. What is important as the article points out, some of the people i have interviewed, you saw some of the racquet clubs tearing up squash and racquetball clubs and creating dance and exercise studios as fitness becomes more popular and moves away from sports to recreational exercise. Lets get back to the lady in the leotard here. This is jane fonda. Jane fonda was already a celebrated actress and controversial activist. She is actually not that well known, she was married to the founder for students for democratic society. She founded the workout studio to support californias campaign for economics democracy. One of the things that is interesting about that she wrote in her memoir, even though she was channeling millions of dollars into his nonprofit, he was dismissive of the workout studio and thought it was silly and superficial and what are you ladies doing in there . She was already a celebrity, so it had her name attached to it, and two, vhs. No matter how many people were coming into clubs and being built, nothing could compare with having a videotape in your hand not that cheap. Fitness videos were like 40 or 50. But you could do it at any time. That was responsible for promoting and proliferating fitness culture beyond brickandmortar environment. I spoke a lot less weekend alluded to it this week about the way jazzercise in particular and these exercise formats were not, even if they were genuinely kind of prowoman, they were not overly feminist at all. They were still talking about thin size. Jane fonda was different. She and her book, which came with the workout, she talked about how exercise is about selfdetermination, how she wants this book and program to be as much for secretaries as Beverly Hills women. She has this whole feminist line about reclaiming her own body which is very different from the language used in other dance exercise women. At the same time she gets criticized for perpetuating a kind of slim femininity and white and affluent femininity through her workout. That continues to be something she is criticized for even though it is not an aspect of her book. This is an image from jenny ellisons article about fat womens aerobics culture in the 1980s. I love that article because i think it highlights so much the way that even as fitness culture was in many ways deeply problematic in this period, the answer by people who might resist was not going to work out, i will remake and appropriate this and make it my own in the way that feels more inclusive and honest and genuine. So her article is great i think because she emphasizes groups like this one, large as life fitness and other fat women who realize the kind of thin dominance, the dominance of thinness in these exercises or the goal is to be thin. They Say Community movement exercise, health, it is awesome. We want to do it in a way that affirms bodies like us as more than a stop on the way to becoming fit, as something good in their own light. That is a powerful angle. A lot of times the critique of fitness culture, all it is is perpetuating a thin ideal. That overlooks important stories like this. Another group of marginalized people who are important to the creation of contemporary fitness culture are of course lgbtq people. There would be none today without them. Talk about the way that group operated. The gentleman on the left is john blair. He was a gym entrepreneur and a nightclub impresario. He talks about being a young gay man in los angeles in 1970 and about going to the first gay gym in los angeles and having a place where he could find nautilus machines and wear tube socks and be himself. Having put together that material about arthur jones who was homophobic, racist, misogynist, then to hear john blair who was a huge activist, who is queer himself and activist for rights, talk about the presence of nautilus machines being a one sign it was a good place, a cipher fellows to meander was particular spaces or devices or experiences get remade and reused by everyday people. That is important to think about with the history of any of these phenomena. Blair has a gym in l. A. , moves to new york and also has gyms and nightclubs. He talks about how during hivaids going to the gym and having what he called the voice to speak, the fit, muscular body, became important to show you were not sick or wasting away from hiv aids. Wearing that signifier of health on your body was one way that fitness culture operated in that time. And this studio here, i have a great pleasure of interviewing molly fox, still one of the leaders, and she used a great term, which some of you have probably heard, a third place, to describe the role of studios and others in that time in new york city. She talks about the marginalization of lgbtq people in that time and the way these gyms were places where particularly in new york she had her studio in chelsea, there was a kind of place where you were not going to be marginalized, seen as diseased or other, and these were incredible sources of community. That is important to disaggregate we think of gym culture, the independently owned studios like molly fox, equipment aspect of the industry we learned about from jonathan black and nautilus. They all intersect and are part of this thing called gym culture, but they had different functions and all serve in some ways as places that some are excluded and in places which are also a place for inclusivity as well. I wanted for this last bit of class to talk about this path not taken. So let me explain what i am talking about. One of the things bubbled up through my oral history interviews is i have interviewed all of these luminaries from the 1980s, this high point to put one digit on it, in the middle of the 1980s 22 Million People are doing aerobics in the United States. That was something that no one had heard about 15 or 10 years earlier. What kept coming up was either i was a physical education teacher, i was a major, or if you imagine i was born in another era, i would have been a pe teacher. There was a boom in the private industry that created all these opportunities in the private realm for people who are talented who would have otherwise gone into teaching pe. That became another avenue to look at how the rise of this industry how in some ways contributed to these austerity policies which have drained quality physical education from the public realm. Here is some examples of intersection which a lot of people told me about. Jacki sorenson, she was involved on the president ial council for youth fitness, wrote physical education curriculum and then in 1990, president george bush the first appoints Arnold Schwarzenegger as the head of the president ial council on fitness. We have about that with Dwight Eisenhower and john f. Kennedy. This is remarkable. We talked about how marginal muscle beach was and how marginal weightlifting was. The idea a republican conservative president would be appointing Arnold Schwarzenegger as the head of a very staid president ial council on fitness, that says a lot about the mainstreaming. This dance aerobics instructor who is really promoting exercise for girls would be writing pe curriculum, that does suggest a real change i dont want to minimalize. I want to talk about a few people who talked about that path not taken. Can you imagine she calls herself miss buns of steel, she became successful through fitness infomercials. She starred in a whole bunch of dvds and did well for herself. When i interviewed her, she told me she was a kid who grew up in california around a lot of boys. She was super sporty. She was in to weightlifting and ended up competing in weightlifting. She was the only girl in her class at chico state to graduate in exercise science. She said if she had not graduated when she did in the 1970s, her only opportunity would have been to go and be a physical education teacher, a career path which looking back when i talked to her, enormous career she built for herself, seems like it would have been a missed opportunity. She went on to teach aerobics and other types of fitness at cruises, luxury spa, big on the Fitness Convention circuit, born in the 1980s, and she became someone who shaped and created this industry. And who feels like she lucked out by being born at the right time. Because for a girl like her, born 10 or 15 years early, she would have been a pe teacher. Most of you know, particularly in moments of austerity around social spending and social spending, is not a glamorous lifestyle. Kudos to people who do it because it is important. I want to focus on these folks. That is capi and peter davis. That is carol scott. All three of these folks, all three of these folks have some connection to that story. I grouped them altogether because where they end up, kathy and peter davis found the first professional association for aerobics instructors. And then carol that was in california. They went to school in san diego. Carol scott a few years later started essentially the east coast version of that called east coast alliance, east coast fitness. And these people that came out of the tennis world told me similar stories of being jocks, studying phys ed and graduating in the early 1980s into this dynamic realm of commercial fitness they never would have imagined existed before. And having that opportunity to take up that felt like one could not give up. Carol expressed i think an interesting perspective on the difference of the paths that lay before her. She was like i could go be creating programming and working out with all of these people from different walks of life and being at the center of this dynamic industry, or i could roll out the balls in the gymnasium and follow the preexisting curriculum which i had little power to change. I point this out because all of these folks here not only chose personal careers in fitness but went on to create professional infrastructure for the industry and industry officials which did not exist before. Just the you know, one of the things those organizations created was kind of conventions. It still does in some places. You apply with your programming, you see spinning or step, and you present like an academic conference and different people see your workout. I dont know what was being presented but that was at e. C. A. Fitness where i have presented. So last example of this, ive interviewed both of these folks, elizabeth and fred. They are the power couple of modern fitness, programmers of exhale. They had the lotte berk method. Lydia bach brought the lotte berk method to the u. S. Fred devito, he was a pe teacher. He had a job and it was secure, but his then girlfriend, now wife elizabeth was a dancer working at lotte berk, no men allowed even on the premises, and he went. He got a side job working the desk. And then he started getting trained and he made this tough decision which he said his parents did not understand in the beginning of him leaving a secured teaching job to go and work in this fledgling Fitness Industry. I was taken by the way he described why he did that. He said to me, and to you at the new school, leaving the public realm to work in private industry feels like that is a move to the more exclusive or exclusionary realm which in some ways is right. What devito explained to me, he said i was teaching kids who were already jocks, the kids who were out of shape or felt humiliated, they would sit on the side and not try. And the curriculum only perpetuated that. There was no opportunity for me to get people to Love Movement or create a collectively inspiring environment. He said in the studio world which was so new, there was that opportunity to create the environment. That is the kind of thing you hear a lot. In this particular case as well, he has a really interesting honor. He is the first man apparently allowed into one of the lotte berk classes. And lydia bach was the one who brought the method from europe to the United States. So i want to close right now. We went a little bit later than i would have thought, just with this very strange image with lydia bach not the same photo shoot but lydia bach and Arnold Schwarzenegger in a strange arm wrestling contest. I dont have a date but it was used in a promotion for the lotte berk method of how to get strong. One of the things that happens in the 1980s in this crazy end of urgent and multifaceted history, you start to see convergence. Something like the lotte berk method or an out of dance in london born out of dance for Society Ladies and Arnold Schwarzenegger, the super macho male bodybuilding culture, there is a mainstream convergence that is happening in this period where there is a wider spread celebration of the pursuit of individual fitness as objective good but is happening across the culture. At the same time in a moment of defunding of public institutions, for all the enthusiasm, what you are seeing grow is the private sector, private clubs, vhs tapes for sales, studios, franchise businesses, it is not all one thing. They function in ways that are great for some people and not for others. But it is the private realm which is really booming in this period, but for the public but not always with a lot of substance, profession of support for fitness culture with you see which you see on Ronald Reagan on the nautilus machine or george bush promoting a bodybuilder to the president ial council for fitness area i will let you go. I look forward to hearing your thoughts on this talk. If you are joining us from cspan, thank you for joining me. Have a wonderful week and thank you, cspan, for inviting me on. [captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2020] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] you are watching American History tv, only on cspan 3. American history tv is on cspan3 every weekend. You can watch these in their entirety on our website. Heres a quick look at one of our programs. Each week, American History tv brings to archival films that provide content for todays Public Affairs issues. We have been discovering the fact that this nation has covered a lot of territory in short time. The exact point of origin for the influenza virus is not known but the current epidemic had its beginnings in hong kong and singapore. In early april. By mid april, the disease had become academic in both of these cities and remained so throughout the rest of the month. Of ed to the island here it is estimated that as nearly half a Million People were attacked within eight short time. Within a short time. Appearance made its in borneo and japan. Centers major shipping of these areas, the disease very widely scattered into indonesia,laces as india, guam, and the philippines. In latet cases also may, the disease was reported as far away as australia and on board several ships en route from australia to San Francisco. The first appearance of the disease in the u. S. Was on june 2. The state is important because it means only a short six weeks from the time the first cases were reported in china, they occurred in the United States, which indicates the great rapidity with which influenza can spread over the world. By mid june, this disease had practically circled the globe, including south, south west asia, the middle east, europe, australia, and north america. Late in june, the disease made its appearance in north africa, introduced by the muslims returning from their pilgrimages from mecca. In early july, the disease made its appearance in chile. Months, every continent on the globe had been involved in this pandemic. You mentioned it admirable it had been reported on ships en route to San Francisco and ineral cases were diagnosed our fleet. Shouldnt we isolate those cases . Unfortunately, not so simple. For the reason that quarantine against influenza did not was not affected. How a been possible for all the cases on ships to be isolated, it would had little effect on the actual spread of the disease because undoubtedly, there were many more people on board the same ships who by reason of a infectiontly acquired wouldve show no symptoms and therefore, they could not of been readily identified if they were passing through a quarantine station. A brief look at one of our many programs available in its entirety on our website, cspan. Org history. American history tv, exploring our nations past every weekend on cspan3. Is a formeroeder c. I. A. Officer and author of the foundation of the cia, harry truman, the missouri gang, and the origins of the cold war. He talks about the history of u. S. Intelligence gatherings through world war ii and details how and why president truman established the cia in 1947. He tells the story of a missouri gang who were instrumental in the creation of the cia

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