this post was submitted on 26 May 2026
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I am very strong. I have never used drugs to enhance my performance. I don't compete. I don't need to. I also don't want to die an early death. I will need a knee replacement because I ran too far on a knee already wrecked from jumping out of planes and poor decisions in college. The only steroids I've taken are shots into my knee joint, on the advice of an Orthopaedic surgeon who wouldn't just cut the thing off and fit a prosthetic so I could run again and also make a TSA agent upset because they had to check my metallic leg for bomb dust. Unsurprisingly, the steroids did nothing and I hate needles. Certainly didn't give me freakish strength. Oddly it might qualify to compete here and walk home poorer in wealth and morals than I already am.
So with that context, I care to say a few things. Dearest readers, this is just another (de)evolution of the freak show. There, I said it. Entertainment value, that pays the performers for that performance, and ultimately exploits them under the guise of care and the spotlight. The real benefactors are, as so many alluded to, Donald Trump and Peter Thiel. In a PT Barnum-esque horror show of performance that builds upon the "ideal male physique" applied, in this case, to all genders through a cocktail of juices. The irony of promoting drug and surgery induced changes in sports here is not lost on me, but money washes away morality. Traditional and body norms don't apply to this crowd when it comes to printing money on the backs of non-billionaires, but I digress.
Banking on the understood dilemma that capitalism has no need for athletics that can't sell ads, they pay to promote artificial physique instead of merely encouraging it in the dank rooms of a Florida home, I mean club. A wheaties box does not pay all day every day, they understand, so swimming or running or, perhaps, curling (oddly not represented, despite the rogue-like mental gymnastics required to cheat, which should be prized in such a theater as this), can come, show off, and trudge home with bags of cash. Everyone wins.
Sickening? Yes. Immoral? Of course. A freakshow, to cite the founder of Mr. Universe and other bodybuilding competitions? Of course, it's why, as one audience member declared when they banned drugs, they watch. For the freaks. Freaks aplenty. Not just the muscular type, but the self-declared champions of Christ and Golden Calves Peter Thiel. Along with the anti-muscular fast food loving grifter.
If only table flipping was a sport, would we see buff Jesus partake? In this crowd, that would be too woke. Thankfully I'm a Buddhist, and we're supposed to fat and happy. I'm neither. Maybe I would be happy, at least, if I ate shark cartilage and shot HGH into my eyeballs so I could bench a Type 82 Kübelwagen or swim faster than a U-Boat. I'm not willing to find out though.
Thanks for the kind words. I just can't believe we're in a state of the world where pumped up kicks isn't just a description about fancy shoes on the bullies in a school shooting song, but it's also a legitimate strategy to consolidate wealth and power.
All my essay writing sarcasm aside (it's writing day), it's just a means to make money. They are making it off of mental gymnastics around juicing in sports and desperation. People know there are drugs in sports, and these folks are just openly welcoming it rather than trying to mask it. They know athletes are desperate for money and prestige, because so little of it exists outside of the major sports in the world. So it's a cash grab and a way to expand their followings and influence, while making a few extra dollars.
Everyone who participates wins because the competitors walk away with money. The promoters get money. The advertisers get money. And people get entertainment. The rest of the moral equation aside, it truly is a win/win for everyone involved. Even the folks who place dead last still gain from competing and the association with powerful and influential people.