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- <text id=91TT2348>
- <title>
- Oct. 21, 1991: Real-Life Davids vs. Goliaths
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 21, 1991 Sex, Lies & Politics
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SHOW BUSINESS, Page 102
- Real-Life Davids vs. Goliaths
- </hdr><body>
- <p>When amateurs take on the American Gladiators, it makes for a
- TV show, toys and--who knows?--maybe even a movie
- </p>
- <p>By Janice C. Simpson
- </p>
- <p> We don't know about Elvis, but Walter Mitty lives. You
- can find him poised atop a 7-ft. platform swinging a big stick
- at a muscle-bound giant with a name like Laser or Nitro. Or
- swooping through the air on a bungee cord 15 ft. above the
- ground, trying to master a kind of aerial basketball. Sound like
- Mitty's fantasies have got a little outrageous? Obviously, you
- haven't seen American Gladiators, the syndicated television show
- on which ordinary, albeit very physically fit, people compete
- in athletic events against a squad of professional male and
- female athletes and body builders.
- </p>
- <p> A wacky hybrid of sporting event, game show and Roman
- circus, American Gladiators has developed a strong cult
- following among both adults (who root for the amateur
- challengers) and kids (who cheer on the cartoonlike gladiators).
- Ratings have nearly doubled since the show debuted two years
- ago, making it one of the top five weekly hours currently in
- syndication. Says gladiator Dan Clark, better known as Nitro:
- "For the spellers, you've got Wheel of Fortune; for the guys who
- go shopping, you've got The Price Is Right; for the athlete,
- you've got American Gladiators."
- </p>
- <p> This month the gladiators are hitting the road for a
- 100-city cross-country tour in which local jocks will have a
- chance to take on the titans. "The main attraction of Gladiators
- is that you can come down and be in the show," says Michael
- Horton, who portrays the gladiator team leader Gemini. "We give
- the everyday blue-collar person who's kept himself or herself
- in shape a chance to show what he or she can do." So far,
- 25,000 have tried out for the television show, and legions more
- are expected to compete for a slot in the live contests. Just
- as on the television show, competitors will try to win points
- by completing tasks such as scaling a 30-ft. wall in 60 sec.,
- while the gladiators try to thwart their efforts.
- </p>
- <p> Only the strongest survive. The very first round of the
- tryouts, in which men are required to do 25 pull-ups, and women
- eight, in 30 sec., eliminates up to 90% of all challengers. The
- field is further winnowed by subsequent requirements: running
- the 40-yd. dash in under 6 sec., winning a one-on-one game of
- tug-of-war, and playing a round of Powerball, a brutal version
- of tag.
- </p>
- <p> The Top Ten point winners to emerge from the national tour
- will meet in Atlantic City next May to compete for $50,000 in
- prizes. But the major attraction seems to be the chance for the
- average guy or gal to be more than an armchair athlete. "I've
- always been pretty athletic, but competition is new to me," says
- Joseph Mauro, 25, a Brooklyn baker who made it through the
- trials in New York City. "I'm excited about this because I want
- to meet those guys in the ring."
- </p>
- <p> Kids love the gladiators because their shows are like
- real-life video games with living heroes. "I like the way the
- gladiators make it seem so easy," says Braxton Winston, 8, a
- Brooklyn fan who watches the TV show with his brother Brandon,
- 7. The boys' mother Stella is in favor too. "I like them liking
- the gladiators," she says. "They're good role models. They don't
- do drugs, they eat the right foods, they take pride in their
- bodies. They give the children something to strive for."
- </p>
- <p> Merchandisers are racing to cash in on what is shaping up
- as the next pop-culture craze after the Teenage Mutant Ninja
- Turtles. A Nintendo video-game version of Gladiators is being
- readied for release this month. Topps is planning to come out
- with trading cards of the 10 gladiators. Newhall Merchandising
- Concepts, Inc., is whipping up American Gladiators Juniors
- vitamins for young gladiator wannabes. And Mattel is introducing
- a line of toys that includes miniature gladiator action figures
- and small-scale models of events such as the obstacle course,
- known as the Eliminator. In Hollywood fevered brains are at
- work, of course, trying to think of a way to develop an animated
- cartoon series and a movie from all this. "We haven't figured
- out how to do that yet," confesses Samuel Goldwyn Jr., whose
- company owns the rights to the show. "Just guys in gladiator
- suits solving crimes won't do it."
- </p>
- <p> The idea for these latter-day gladiatorial games
- originated with ironworkers in Erie, Pa. "I wanted a
- workingman's Olympics," says Dann Carr, a five-time national
- arm-wrestling champ, who created the contests 20 years ago as
- entertainment for the annual Erie Iron Workers Union picnic,
- "but I never thought it would take off like it did."
- </p>
- <p> In 1983 Carr asked his buddy Johnny Ferraro, a one-time
- Elvis impersonator and a relentless promoter, to help him turn
- the games into a charity benefit to raise money for a local
- youth center. When 3,000 people showed up for the event, Ferraro
- recognized the mass-appeal potential and took the idea to
- Hollywood. "This was real-life Rocky," he says. It took five
- years and scores of rejections before the Goldwyn company
- finally agreed to develop a television series.
- </p>
- <p> The pilot was a disaster. Actors were recruited to play
- the gladiators and were directed to adopt fake personalities.
- The costumes were tacky, and the overall style was
- uncomfortably close to the campiness of pro wrestling. "It was
- a schlock job," says Ferraro. "Out of a diamond, they gave you
- a piece of coal."
- </p>
- <p> The concept was reworked to focus on the David-and-Goliath
- aspects of the competition. New gladiators with backgrounds as
- professional football players and Olympic competitors were
- hired. The costumes were redesigned for a sportier look. And,
- most important, both gladiators and contenders were directed to
- play for real. "It's now pure competition," says Horton, a
- former lineman with the Philadelphia Eagles and Boston Patriots
- who is the only one of the gladiators from the original pilot
- still with the show. The authenticity of the competition is
- driven home by the injuries among gladiators as well as
- contenders. "We've had broken collar bones, torn up knees and
- neck damage," says Horton.
- </p>
- <p> Critics initially dismissed the show as "crash
- television." But viewers liked what they saw: good-looking
- people, fast action and high drama. Nowadays the producers keep
- the show fresh by regularly adding new games emphasizing agility
- and tenacity over brute strength. Sports magazine-style
- features, such as locker-room interviews with the gladiators and
- taped profiles of the contenders, have been incorporated for a
- more upscale look.
- </p>
- <p> Behind the scenes, a delighted Ferraro has trimmed his
- sideburns and got out of the Elvis business so that he can
- devote all his energy to Gladiators. "Danny and me have invented
- the nuclear bomb," he says. "And now it's exploding."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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