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Tuesday, February 24. 2009
Esther Williams Posted by Rob Mars
in Entertainment, Female Athletes, Women's Sports at
10:52
Comments (0) Trackbacks (3) Esther Williams
When Esther Williams was winning national championships in swimming, female athletes rarely achieved fame, much less fortune. They were few in number and generally marginalized. Still, Esther was a preternaturally talented swimmer and likely would have won a gold medal at the 1940 Olympics to be held in Tokyo, perhaps becoming an exception to the times. World War II intervened, however, and stole that singular opportunity from her.
Nevertheless, she had attracted attention anyway. From her official website: In 1940 newspaper sports reportage, swimmers were frequently lined up for cheesecake photos, flashing big smiles and lots of leg. With her stunning good looks and tall, well-muscled frame, Esther was a standout! It didn't take long for legendary showman Billy Rose to notice the photogenic champion. Rose needed a female lead to star opposite Olympian and screen star Johnny Weismuller in his San Francisco Aquacade review. He invited Williams up for an audition and, so the story goes, Weismuller himself picked her out of a casting call of 75 hopefuls. Her performing career had begun. Williams went on to make several movies, and for a time was among MGM's biggest stars. She was most famous, of course, for her scenes in the water. There she did most the work herself, which led to many injuries, even breaking her neck once during filming of a 115 ft dive. (Something to keep in mind when watching scenes from her movies, like the clip below.) Resilient as ever, Esther recently fought back from a stroke; not only that, she is still swimming, as revealed in a GMA interview from 2007. Want to know where the sport of synchronized swimming came from? Look no further than Esther Williams: Thursday, February 12. 2009
Beat the BS Posted by Rob Mars
in Female Athletes, Feminism, General, Internet, Women's Sports at
07:49
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I'm grateful that an alert reader pointed out this video from Nike's GameChangers campaign. Sometimes the best way to demonstrate the absurdity of a baseless viewpoint is to give it an unfiltered airing, a tactic used here to great advantage, I think:
Friday, February 6. 2009
TGIF Posted by Rob Mars
in Entertainment, Female Athletes, Women's Sports at
12:43
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) TGIF
That's right, Thank God/Goddess/Goodness (take your pick) It's Friday! I don't know about you, but for me this has been a busy week. And it has been busy in the world of women's sports as well, appropriate for the week in which National Girls and Women in Sports Day landed this year. No break at the end either—two news items in particular must be noted.
To begin with, WNBA icon Lisa Leslie announced Wednesday that this season will be her last: "I love being a wife, I enjoy my husband and our time. I love being a mom. I'm really passionate about raising a child and being there for her. For me, I just see it's really hard to give 100 percent to everything." (Source: The Associated Press.) Then, last night, Tennessee coach Pat Summitt got her 1,000th career victory. One of her responses to the fuss I find telling: "I think it's more important to focus on the things that will put us in position to win than the number of games we've won." Perhaps this mindset at least partly explains why she is now the only Division I coach—male or female—with 1,000 career wins. It seems a pity to post on Friday without something fun. This action-comedy short from the Kick Ass Kandy! series should suffice. The heroine is played by Sasha Jackson, a former competitive diver and gymnast who has turned her attention to acting: Wednesday, February 4. 2009
National Girls and Women in Sports Day Posted by Rob Mars
in Female Athletes, Feminism, Women's Sports at
10:12
Comments (0) Trackback (1) National Girls and Women in Sports Day
Today is the 23rd anniversary of National Girls and Women in Sports Day. A day to celebrate the accomplishments of female athletes and consider the progress yet needed for women to have equal opportunity in athletics. WNBA President Donna Orender recently penned an op-ed piece to mark the occasion. I am happy to share this with you here.
"Why the WNBA Matters" Tuesday, February 3. 2009 |
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