Joe Weider, mighty businessman.Joe Weider Josef E. "Joe" Weider (born November 29, 1922) is the Canadian co-founder of the International Federation of BodyBuilders (IFBB) along with brother Ben Weider and creator of the Mr. Olympia, Ms. Olympia and the now defunct Masters Olympia bodybuilding contests. , mighty businessman Back in the 1940s, Joe Weider, who had just launched his first fitness magazine, ran into Charles Atlas Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view. Mark blatant advertising for , using . at the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Athletic Club. Atlas told Weider, "You're no good in business. Look at me. When I sell my course (12 lessons, each a dozen mimeographed sheets), I make more money than you, and I don't have to manufacture weights, ship the heavy weights or invest a lot of money." Today Weider presides over a body-building conglomerate with sales above $350 million and more than 4,000 employees. Its far-flung operation include publishing, manufacturing and marketing of weights and exercise equipment and nutritional supplements Nutritional Supplements Definition Nutritional supplements include vitamins, minerals, herbs, meal supplements, sports nutrition products, natural food supplements, and other related products used to boost the nutritional content of the diet. . Weider's five magazines dominate the field, the equipment division has an 8 percent share of the market, and the nutritional supplement business, an estimated 35 percent. At 68 the still-fit Weider continues to expand his privately held business with an aggressive acquisition program. And last summer Weider came out with his fifth magazine called "Moxie," targeted at women 35 and older. Underpinning all of Weider's business interests is a fervid belief in the benefits of body building: "It's as necessary as brushing your teeth. I believe in superfitness and training with weights to build a strong and vigorous body because only by being physically fit and strong can anyone achieve their full potential mentally and physically." To Weider, exercise is not a mere recreational activity but rather the heart of a whole lifestyle. Unlike Charles Atlas and other fitness gurus, Weider said, "I never catered to laziness and quick fixes in nutrition and fitness. Selling you a sweatband won't make you lose weight. What Atlas sold might make money, but it would never make you strong, and he in fact used weights and did gymnastics." Weider's proselytizing has paid off. Affable, engaging and articulate, Weider has turned the once ridiculed sport into one with close to 30 million adherents. Founder of the Mr. Olympia contest in 1965, Weider also put Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Alois Schwarzenegger (German pronunciation (IPA): [ˈaɐ̯nɔlt ˈaloɪ̯s ˈʃvaɐ̯ʦənˌʔɛɡɐ] on the map. Early recognizing the potential for women body building, his magazines began to prominantly feature female body builder champions. Weider's almost messianic mes·si·an·ic also Mes·si·an·ic adj. 1. Of or relating to a messiah: messianic hopes. 2. Of or characterized by messianism: messianic nationalism. sense of mission has not gotten in the way of clear-headed business acumen. "Muscle & Fitness," his flagship magazine Flagship Magazine is an independent magazine for gamers [1]. Published in the UK, it started in 1983 for PBM players [2]. Since its hundredth issue in 2002, it has extended its coverage to include boardgames, role-playing games, web games and massively , has a circulation of 627,000 and is printed in six foreign languages. As the exercise movement caught fire, Weider capitalized on it by starting four other niche player magazines. "Flex" is directed at the competitive bodybuilder, "Shape," at women. "Men's Fitness Men’s Fitness is a men’s magazine published by American Media, Inc. Founded in the United States in 1987, it was originally called Sports Fitness. The premier issue featured Michael Pare from the television show, The Greatest American Hero. " is a men's lifestyle magazine. In starting a new magazine, Weider spurns formal market research and techniques favored by other large businesses: "We know our market." In starting "Moxie," for instance, he said, "my market research is that in everyday life I deal with many women, who I meet in gyms and aerobic classes and I receive thousands of letters from women in their 30s to 50s." Weider's magazines have helped tighten his lock grip on other parts of the body building industry, providing him with an outlet to advertise his food supplements, exercize equipment and other products. In a typical issue of "Muscle & Fitness," 40 out of 250 plus pages are advertisements for Weider products. One competitor, Twin Labs, a Ronkonoma, Long Island-based vitamin company, sued Weider for antitrust violations in not accepted Twin Lab advertisements in his magazines. The case, dismissed for lack of evidence, is currently being appealed. Weider refused to comment on the case. One thing that sets Weider apart from many entrepreneurs is his willingness to relinquish control and let others attend to the details of management: "I learned long ago creative and imaginative people can't provide the stabilizing force of good administration. A few ideas that are losers could have destroyed everything." To oversee day-to-day operations and finances, Weider hired Allan Dalfen as president and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. in 1979. Despite never having lifted a weight, Dalfen has helped grow the company from a 20 person operation a decade ago and masterminded its acquisition program. Last year Weider purchased Weslo, a home fitness equipment manufacturer based in Utah, for under $10 million. Weslo's products, marketed under its own name, Health Master and Pro Form, already account for more than half of equipment division's $185 million of sales. Other acquisitions include a manufacturer of athletic injury prevention products; Tiger's Milk Tiger's Milk is a nutrition bar made by Schiff Nutrition Group, Inc. Joe Weider introduced Tiger's Milk in the 1960s. The nutrition bar brand is known as "America's Original Nutrition Bar. , a nutrition snack bar company; and Schiff Vitamin, a mainstream vitamin company. Under Dalfen's guidance Weider's equipment division has shifted its marketing emphasis from mail order to a network of 6,000 retail outlets. As Weider tells it, he foresaw in the 1950s the boom in body building that he more than anyone helped to engineer. In 1939, at the age of 16 he began by publishing a newsletter called "Your Physique," which would evolve into "Muscle & Fitness," doing everything himself at home, including printing. At the time there were no body-building magazines; at best the incipient field would share space in magazines which covered boxing, wrestling and weight lifting weight lifting, international sport, also a training technique for athletes in other sports. From the earliest times men have lifted weights as a test of strength. . In 1942 Weider, relocated to New Jersey, found a newsstand distributor, and soon his magazine circulation reached 50,000. By the 1950's Weider controlled 16 magazines with a total circulation of 25 million, with titles such as "American Manhood" and "Fury." But when the distributor, American News The American News is a newspaper in Aberdeen, South Dakota, published by Schurz Communications of South Bend, Indiana. Schurz bought The American News from The McClatchy Company in June 2006 after McClatchy acquired Knight Ridder, the Co., was sold, Weider was left with $7 million of unpaid receivables, and he was forced to retrench re·trench v. re·trenched, re·trench·ing, re·trench·es v.tr. 1. To cut down; reduce. 2. To remove, delete, or omit. v.intr. To curtail expenses; economize. to one magazine, "Muscle Builder." When he moved to his current location in Woodland Hills during the mid-1960s, his revenues were $5 million. Weider bristles at the suggestion he had a blueprint to grab control of every facet of the business. "We had to develop these businesses because no one else was there. People couldn't buy the equipment we talked about, so we went into the business of manufacturing weights. Body builders wanted a place where they could compete, so we created a body building competition. Because the competitions lost money on every show, we couldn't find promoters so we began promoting shows and to set up channels at many countries, we formed the IFBB IFBB International Federation of Body Builders (now International Federation of Bodybuilding and Fitness) IFBB International Federation of Bodybuilding and Fitness (formerly International Federation of BodyBuilders) ." So Weider explains every step of the way. Montreal-based IFBB, acronym for the International Federation of Body Builders, is headed by Weider's brother, Ben Weider Benjamin "Ben" Weider (born February 1, 1924 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada) is the co-founder of the International Federation of BodyBuilders (IFBB) along with brother Joe Weider. He is a Jewish businessman from Montreal well-known in two areas: Bodybuilding and Napoleonic history. . An important vehicle for the Weider promotion machine, it has helped catapult the careers of virtually all of body building's superstars. In his push to expand, Weider has not escaped controversy. His competitors, for example, grumble about his close links with the IFBB and the competitive circuit. Weider answers that in 1974, when the competitions began to turn a profit, he surrendered his control and put up the shows for bids from promoters. His brother, who Weider said first served at the helm because no one else was willing to assume the full-time, non-salaried position, is now elected democratically. To rebut To defeat, dispute, or remove the effect of the other side's facts or arguments in a particular case or controversy. When a defendant in a lawsuit proves that the plaintiff's allegations are not true, the defendant has thereby rebutted them. TO REBUT. the charge the shows serve to promote his magazine, Weider points out all the other body-building publications go to the shows and photograph and interview the stars. Hailing from the poor Jewish section of Montreal Of Montreal is an American indie pop band formed in Athens, Georgia, fronted by Kevin Barnes. It was among the second wave of groups to emerge from The Elephant 6 Recording Company. , Weider first got involved in body building because as a skinny kid, he had to defend himself in the rough-and-tumble neighborhood. Professing to have more energy now than ever, Weider is not ready to slow down, although he is grooming several people, including his nephew, to succeed him. He said he has no intention at the present time to go public: "What would we do with the money?" He said his organization needs a year or two to digest its recent acquisitions before it can think about new ventures. He has resisted the temptation to expand beyond the fitness business: "We only do what we know," he said. One goal close to his heart is to have body building, as distinguished from weight lifting, recognized as an Olympic sport by the International Olympic Committee “IOC” redirects here. For other uses, see IOC (disambiguation). The International Olympic Committee (French: Comité International Olympique) is an organization based in Lausanne, Switzerland, created by Pierre de Coubertin and Demetrios Vikelas on June 23 (IOC IOC abbr. International Olympic Committee IOC n abbr (= International Olympic Committee) → COI m IOC n abbr (= ), which is set to reach a decision soon. Although body builders and weight lifters use the same equipment, the objective of bodybuilding bodybuilding Developing of the physique through exercise and diet, often for competitive exhibition. Bodybuilding aims at displaying pronounced muscle tone and exaggerated muscle mass and definition for overall aesthetic effect. is to attain a physical aesthetic, not to squat or bench press the heaviest weight. A major obstacle to Olympic recognition is the issue of steroids. Despite Weider's stance against them, many of the body builders featured in his magazine are rumored to have used steroids, and the controversy continues to haunt the sport. The nutritional value of Weider's food supplements has also stirred debate. In 1985 Weider ran up against the Federal Trade Commission which challenged the advertised benefits of Weider's nutritional supplements. Weider settled by offering refunds to customers and toning down the claims on the products' labels. "We never claimed any food or supplement could build muscles by themselves," he now says. Weider presides over his empire from a two-story building in Woodland Hills. In the lobby hang three full-body portraits of body builders in a style reminiscent of Eakins or Whistler. Weider's large, cluttered office suite is furnished with Empire period antiques and full of bronzes by Remington and other Western sculptors. On the walls there are large landscapes by Hudson River School Hudson River school, group of American landscape painters, working from 1825 to 1875. The 19th-century romantic movements of England, Germany, and France were introduced to the United States by such writers as Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper. and Western artists. Weider, who has worked hard to change the public perception of body builders as muscle-bound mus·cle·bound also mus·cle-bound adj. 1. Having inelastic, overdeveloped muscles, usually as the result of excessive exercise. 2. a. Hindered by or as if by overdeveloped muscles. b. , brain-dead narcissists, is himself the best testimony against the stereotype. Forced to drop out of high school to take a job, he is largely self-educated. An avid reader, he has recently read Peter Gay's biography of Freud and I.F. Stone's study of Socrates. He works out at his home to classical music. He began collecting American art American art, the art of the North American colonies and of the United States. There are separate articles on American architecture, North American Native art, pre-Columbian art and architecture, Mexican art and architecture, Spanish colonial art and architecture, before prices skyrocketed. One Bierstadt he bought for $20,000 would be worth close to $1 million today, he said. Weider lives with his wife of more than 30 years in Hancock Park
Hancock Park is a park in Miracle Mile, Los Angeles, California which is the location of the La Brea Tar Pits, the George C. Page Museum of La Brea Discoveries, and LACMA. . An ex-model, Betty Weider writes columns for his magazines and is frequently photographed in its pages. Despite a reputation for hard-nosed business tactics, Weider says he is not tough enough in dealing with people. "I find it difficult to reject people who make an effort or do something to advance themselves. I remember when I was a kid I walked to the city to shop to get a job, and none of the proprietors needed anybody." |
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