Bash
2002—Las Vegas—An Account
Frank
Zane, Tony Compton, Dave Draper
Las Vegas October 2002
It
all happened so quickly. One moment you’re speeding across
a colorless and barren desert, the next you are standing awash in
dazzling lights, sounds and sensations too plentiful and various
to digest and in short time you are again competing for space on
a strand of remote, bushy highway as if life was a race to the end.
We live in the anticipation and preparation of the moments before
us and in the memory of the moments gone by. The occasion of the
real thing -- the moment itself -- is seldom part of our experience;
that is, unless the “real thing” is extraordinarily
intense and the physics of living, as we know it, is transcended.
Paradise Park visited.
Never
a dull moment, no stress larger than a hiccup, no catastrophes,
no regretful occurrences, no losses, if-onlys or could-haves; just
a rare combination of uncommonly nice and good and interesting people
sharing a life-binding thread of time together and having pleasure
over something worthwhile, pursuing the joys of health, muscle and
might amid the struggle of living day by day.
The
desert weather is perfect this time of year: clear, dry, sunny and
agreeably hot days followed by warm, sharply moonlit nights. Las
Vegas offers her cornucopia of fruits and treats, both wholesome
and forbidden, from sunrise to sunrise. Chance is in every sparkling
casino; risk in the shadows of the sexy bars, easy trouble if you’re
looking for it in dark corners, and endless distractions around
every curve and angle. Mostly you feel safe and sound wherever you
venture. Outdoors and in, you are on the move, whether standing
still or cascading with the flood of animated and chattering pleasure-seekers
of the world.
Not
everyone is loose, energized and getting high. Boredom hollows the
spirit, fatigue bends the back and world stress creases the faces
of the workers attending the broad and insatiable appetites of the
visitors. They live beyond the limits of the Las Vegas we know and
separate themselves from the scene when their shift ends. Home from
work is like home for you and me. What attracts and entertains us;
what is novel, extravagant and awesome to you and me is a routine
they try to forget when the whistle blows and they clock out. It’s
not their party. The casino, the backstage, the restaurant and the
taxi are a job that pays the bills and permits the ebb and flow
of daily living in desert suburbia.
They
probably wish they were in N.Y.C. or San Francisco or St. Pete for
the week, or a day. Just a guess. Alas, they mostly are dreadfully
out of shape and overweight. Just a fact.
Las
Vegas has a monster-size appetite. The energy needs of the city
I see pulsating at night from the view of my 22nd floor perch at
the Tropicana are unfathomable: lights by the billions, air conditioning
for millions of cubic feet of hot space, slots for a million armed
bandits, elevators, escalators, loud speakers, special effects,
alarm systems, hot water, stoves, refrigerators, microwaves, TVs,
computers and on and on. Sacks of money in well-protected piles
lay around everywhere like sandbags to stay the floodwaters of currency.
The dice roll, the ball spins, the cards shuffle and the hands are
delt. The house wins a lot and a lucky few go home with a handful.
Some folks don’t go home at all, it seems.
A
feast to feed the beast: Drinks, smokes and all-you-can-eat buffets
satisfy the hunger of the partygoers and add to their disguised
grief. A lot of cleavage, young and old, not frequently seen in
hometowns, is on display on the runway. The city of lights will
do that to a lady. I walked to a low sidewall of a cashier booth
to peer at the machines processing the chips, cash and coins and
was instantly triangulated by three security men, their monotonous
stares a warning that cameras everywhere were onto my agenda, innocent
or otherwise. I withdrew like a professional, flexing my lats and
inflating my chest. Works every time. The three men cowered, then
vanished, I’ll bet a penny.
Tuna
Tony held a plastic coin bucket while Elaine merrily, yet quietly
wrenched something like two hundred bucks from the automated five-cent
slot machines. Laree recklessly and shamelessly dropped $15 worth
of nickels in less than 20 minutes. I warned her but -- oh, no --
she wouldn’t listen to me. Serves her right. Where’d
she get the rolls of nickels in the first place is a mystery to
me. Rockin’ Ken’s wife, Jean, a cool cookie, was up
a staggering $27 at the roulette table where only women dared to
gather. I retired when the heat was on; the room offers sanctuary
in the temples of pleasure and pain.
40,000
square feet of Gold’s Gym swallowed up a dozen brazen IronOnliners
determined to share the cold and heavy metal a thousand miles away
from home. They went in the mornings to gird themselves for the
day and at night to quench a thirst we all know so well. Friday
at 9 PM, while the city rocked and rolled, three dozen of us met
in front of the gym to contemplate training, opting instead to confer,
converse, relate, share and otherwise hang out and rub triceps and
biceps at the juice bar. One by one the crowd of sort-of-strangers
became a gathering of familiar friends.
“Awkward”
is the word that too often defines the scenes of adults collecting
where a keg or bar is not somewhere in its midst -- the weather
or a silence did not once enter the spontaneous conversations bouncing
off the walls, floor and ceiling. Jabber, hugs, laughter, old and
new stories and camera flashes accompanied and propelled the grinning
participants around and about in circles. By 11:00 normalcy returned
to the gym and the weight floor resumed its empty quiet Friday night
appearance. We fled to the Strip to absorb and contribute a fair
amount of energy, each of us glad we weren’t in the line-up
for the following day’s competition. The Mr. Olympia would
have to do without our ripped and tanned bodies another year. Look
out 2003.
Ever
been to a business expo where retail items and products are on display
by manufacturers or designers or distributors: computers or guns
or boats or RVs or outdoors camping and sporting gear? Booths of
differing dimensions and display-appeal cluster upon thousands and
thousands of square feet of open floor space, each represented by
an articulate spokesperson or team of professionals. Buy and sell
is the name of the game. Network and exchange is a positive alternative.
What’s new, tried and true, who makes it, where can you get
it and for how much, are the questions asked and answered with savvy
and finesse.
Yeah,
right.
You
walk into the Olympia Expo Hall and are promptly assaulted by a
gillion decibels of sound; yelling and hard music, heavy on the
drums. Confusion is immediate and semi-permanent. The folks aren’t
milling about reviewing the goods and asking questions and making
observations. First of all, there are no folks; these are mostly
bizarre characters and odd personalities, and no one mills about
or asks anything. They intensely fight for their precious space
as they are crushed by one another in a desperate attempt to traverse
the length of the jammed aisles leading to further pandemonium.
If they are not hollering at one another, they are screaming or
yelping. The professionals have lumps on all parts of their partially
clothed physiques. Half of them are men.
Dark
tattoos are popular on top of the lumps, as are lumps on top of
the lumps. I’ve never seen so much muscle-like skin in all
my life. Skulls and cross bones seem to be trendy hanging from ears
and neck chains and bracelets. Quickly it is clear that this no
peace rally. Good. I’m not crazy about peace rallies. The
mob seems like a good mob; only “I’m tough and bad”
has gotten lodged somewhere in their unoriginal and passive brains.
A little weird for those who have taken the highway, the freeway,
the road less traveled. They missed the turnoff a few miles back.
Too late now.
You
can get the latest in gear and supplements and counsel to build
big muscles in months, weeks, days and minutes. As one giant banner
hanging over the Monster Cage declared, “Balls to the Walls”…
whatever that means.
Take
me to my padded hotel room.
I
estimated that 150 faces sat before Frank and me in the pleasant
shade of the small pavilion, as Virgil and Barbara (world’s
greatest caterers) lovingly tended the smoky fires and simmering
foods. Speakers carried our voices, answers in response to questions
that have been tricking all of us over the years of rattling the
iron.
Both
Frank and I are 60 years of age with only months separating us,
and our training techniques run parallel as train tracks traversing
America east to west. When we approach a mountain or a river, we
each assess the obstacle according to our industry and surmount
it according to our resources. The destination is reached, though
the routes he and I choose are different enough to offer passage
to anyone in particular heading in our direction.
The
information is not in the answer so much as it is in the answering.
In
90 minutes we said little that was revealing and earth shaking,
but our voices spoke of weight training and smart eating 45 years
in the making. Frank had to zoom to another engagement; the food,
Virgil enthusiastically announced, was ready for consumption and
I settled in to respond to several dozen flashing cameras and a
final round of handshakes, questions and gratitude. Thank you and
you are welcome.
Within
a few adrenalin-packed hours the hall at the Mandalay Bay would
be alive with oiled, pumped and heaving madness: competitors, judges
and spectators in unison and at odds. Showtime at the Mr. O, 2002.
A
great show thrilled the participants until the announcement of the
winners and losers. Then, the disapproving audience lost its composure…
entirely. No one was in the mood for politics or favoritism or contradiction
to popular opinion, it seems, and though the contestants were toe-to-toe
and shoulder-to-shoulder, the crowd saw it differently than the
judges. In five minutes the Olympia disintegrated into boos, walkouts
and the tossing of objects.
And
there you have it: the art, the passion, the sport and the love
of bodybuilding in a Las Vegas weekend.
Warning:
Too much tension on the struts can cause sudden loss of control.
Nosedive and loss of attitude almost certain.
God’s
Speed… The Bomber
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