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- <text id=91TT2563>
- <title>
- Nov. 18, 1991: Health:Pursuit of Perfection
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 18, 1991 California:The Endangered Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 88
- CALIFORNIA
- Pursuit Of Perfection
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Scott Brown
- </p>
- <p> "I dote on myself, there is that lot of me and all so
- luscious."
- </p>
- <p>-- Walt Whitman, Song of Myself
- </p>
- <p> Manhattan native Henry Jaglom was appalled when he
- arrived in Los Angeles 26 years ago. To his Eastern eye it
- seemed that every billboard and bus bench in the city screamed
- out with advertisements extolling the rewards of the perfect
- body. "Coming from New York, you have an open-mouthed reaction
- to the way things are defined by the physical out here," says
- Jaglom, a filmmaker whose exercise previously consisted of
- walking and an occasional bike ride. "I thought it was all so
- superficial. I was very disdainful."
- </p>
- <p> Soon, however, Jaglom made peace with and even embraced
- the fitness cult of California--although, ironically, he gets
- more exercise in Manhattan than in L.A. because people actually
- make a habit of walking in New York City. His latest film,
- Eating, is about women's struggling with society's message that
- a gorgeous physique is the ultimate virtue. The movie, says
- Jaglom, could have been set only in California, where people
- seem to talk more openly--and obsessively--about their
- bodies than anywhere else. "It's the healthiest thing about this
- place," says Jaglom, who divides his time between New York City
- and Los Angeles. "People say what they think here. They're not
- embarrassed about saying, `I'm concerned about my body.' In the
- rest of the country, they don't admit it."
- </p>
- <p> Jaglom's observation is a considerable overstatement,
- since by now fitness has become a nationwide preoccupation. But
- California, especially Southern California, was where the cult
- of the perfect body began and remains most frenzied: the
- birthplace of triathletes, personal trainers and the 24-hour
- gym; a place where celebrities have their Ferraris valet-parked
- at trendy sports clubs and smoking ranks higher on the list of
- social no-no's than drowning kittens. It is where Tony Roberts,
- portraying a Broadway actor who finds success in Los Angeles in
- the movie Annie Hall, explains that he has encased himself in
- a foil-like eternal-youth suit because it "keeps out the alpha
- rays...You don't get old." It is the place where cruciferous
- vegetables were first worshiped. As the millennium draws near,
- a refurbished Muscle Beach stands as a clogged monument to the
- mesomorphic, hikers and bikers create traffic jams all over the
- diminishing wilderness, and rolfers and herbologists find
- themselves more in demand than ever.
- </p>
- <p> Even in health-conscious California the real cultists
- represent only a small minority of residents (most Californians
- worry more about housing prices, rising taxes, gangs and traffic
- congestion than about the contours of their deltoids). Yet the
- body addicts have pushed the pursuit of the flawless physique
- to its furthest extremes, etching forever the notion of
- California narcissism upon the psyche of the nation. For these
- fitness fanatics the goal is not just to look good but to look
- perfect. And if perfection cannot be achieved through exercise,
- to resort to surgery to attain it.
- </p>
- <p> "My patients are already working out in gyms; they're not
- 98-lb. weaklings," says Dr. Brian Novack, a busy Beverly Hills
- plastic surgeon who offers a dizzying array of body-altering
- operations. "Here, the emphasis is not getting a face-lift when
- you need it, but getting one before you need it." Lately Novack
- has immersed himself in a hot new field: implanting silicone in
- men in search of chiseled pectorals, firm buttocks, bulging
- calves and strong chins. One wonders what Walt Whitman would
- have had to say about that.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-