Modern Society's Love-Hate Relationship with
Strength and Muscle
by John Williams
"[I]t is not from the strongest that harm comes
to the strong, but from the weakest."
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900)
Introduction
The class of illicit drugs known as anabolic
steroids, or more accurately referred to as anabolic-androgenic
steroids (AAS), is subject to a general "catch-all"
definition. Although the laws of prohibition specifically
name certain steroids, this general definition specifically
excludes certain steroids from the scope
of those laws. The single characteristic of a steroid
which allows it to be classified as an illicit drug
is not a chemical one, but rather, a reference to
its physical effect: that it promotes muscle growth.
It would seem, then, that muscle growth is a
bad thing! Can it be said that modern American
society treats strength and muscle as a social evil?
Are Strength and Muscle Considered Dysfunctional
in Modern Society?
Historically, strength and muscle have been the
stuff from which legend was made. From the biblical
stories of Samson1 to the legendary Charles
Atlas,2 strength and muscle had always
been a source of respect and admiration. But as
we stand at the brink of a new millennium, it appears
that an overzealous pursuit of social inclusiveness
and a reliance on technology have denigrated strength
and muscle to little more than a primitive dysfunction.
Those of us who grew to maturity in the 1970s
remember the phenomenon known as "Women's Liberation,"
as well as the crown jewel of that early feminist
movement, the Equal Rights Amendment.3
Although the goals of modern equity feminism have
not been reached, we have grown accustomed to seeing
women in positions as executives and skilled professionals,
and in jobs traditionally reserved for men: construction
workers, police officers, and firefighters. Nevertheless,
society's regard for strong and muscular women has
changed very little since Victorian times.
MESO-Rx author
Krista Scott-Dixon,
a doctoral candidate in women's studies, has written:
"Proper" femininity, for example, does not
include muscles, strength, bulk, or physical
power. *** The actual physical presence of muscular
women is a challenge to rigidly gendered ideologies.
In a society that prefers to function with an
orderly demarcation of "normal" gender, female
bodybuilders are constituted as deviant.4
George Whyte, a competitive bodybuilder from
London, offered this view of bodybuilding in general,
and women's bodybuilding in particular:
[I]t's always been seen as a freak show,
and it will never be accepted. I personally
don't give a shit if the public accept bodybuilding.
We can sustain ourselves. The fact that the
bodybuilding public don't have much interest
in going to female bodybuilding shows that female
bodybuilding is in a bad state. You can't force
people to buy tickets.5
In one university study, male and female students
where shown photographs of male and female bodybuilders,
as well as photographs of non-bodybuilders of each
sex, and they were asked to attribute personality
traits and sex-role behaviors to the persons shown
in the photographs; both males and females attributed
more masculine and less feminine tendencies to the
female bodybuilders, despite the fact that they
did not perceive any difference in such tendencies
between bodybuilding and non-bodybuilding males.6
Perceptions such as these send the message that
muscle makes a woman less of a woman.
It seems clear that, not only in the United States,
but throughout all modern culture, strength and
muscle in women is odd at best, and at worst, an
outright abomination. Despite the advances which
women have made in social equity, muscular strength
is still not considered to be a proper goal for
the "gentler sex." But are these traits universally
accepted amongst men?
As a male over the age of 40 years, this author
has experienced mainstream society's curious perception
of aging men who pursue strength training on more
than a casual level: "Why not golf? Or racquetball?
Or maybe enter some 10K races? Why would an older
guy want to lift great big weights?"
It is true, of course, that a decrease in strength
and muscle should be expected amongst older adults.
As we age, the cross-sectional size and the number
of muscle fibers in skeletal muscles decrease, and
the relative strength of those muscles also decreases.7
However, heavy resistance training can minimize
and even reverse that effect.8
In fact, substantial gains in muscle size (hypertrophy)
have been observed as a result of heavy resistance
training, not only in middle-aged adults, but also
in the elderly.9 Nevertheless, the fact
that muscular hypertrophy can be achieved by older
men does not change social expectations.
Oddly enough, the most negative response to strength
and muscle in older men appears to come from their
peer age group. While younger adults, both male
and female, may appreciate the muscularity of an
aging male, those in his own age group will likely
view that trait less favorably. A study involving
500 subjects, ranging in age from six to 60, showed
that nearly all subjects attributed more favorable
traits to mesomorphs (muscular types) than to ectomorphs
(slender types) or endomorphs (obese types), but
that mesomorphs were rated more negatively as the
age of the group members increased.10
- Marginalization of the Strength and Muscle
Culture
The culture of strength and muscle are best characterized
by two types of competition: powerlifting and bodybuilding.
While powerlifting is the ultimate expression of
pure strength in athletic competition, bodybuilding
expresses the aesthetics of muscular hypertrophy
in physical appearance. Yet neither of these competitive
events enjoy any substantial public support.
In its "Guidelines for Organising a World Championship"
the International Powerlifting Federation suggests
that "[t]he venue should provide seating for a minimum
of 500 spectators."11 Five hundred spectators
at a world championship? Bodybuilding fares
better in attendance, but not by much. In 1998,
Joe Weider's Mr. Olympia, the most prestigious contest
in bodybuilding, was held at New York's Madison
Square Garden with a sold-out crowd of less than
6,000.12 Compare this to basketball,
for instance, where the venue in smaller cities,
such as the Cleveland Cavaliers' 20,000-seat Gund
Arena, can boast annual attendance of more than
800,000 during a single season.13 Despite
the enthusiastic support of die-hard fans, strength
and muscle competitions are of minimal interest
to the mainstream American public.
- Body Dysmorphic Disorder: The Deviance
of Strength and Muscle
The attitude of many newcomers to strength training
are revealed in Usenet's most prolific weight training
newsgroup, misc.fitness.weights:
"What I want to do is get stronger and have
more tone without getting big. I really have
a fear of getting huge."14
"I don't wanna get all huge and buff. Just
solid and well toned."15
"I'm not interested in getting big (just
toned well.)"16
While these comments aptly demonstrate the ubiquitous
use of the misnomer "tone" and the naïveté of the
writers as to what is really involved in achieving
the desired results, they also exhibit an attitude
toward strength and muscle that has become quite
prevalent: one should avoid getting too big
or too strong. Does this attitude have an
underlying source?
The answer is an emphatic "Yes!" As if strength
and muscle were not already subject to sufficient
social criticism, some in the medical community
have recently decided to designate them as deviant.
Coining the word "bigorexia" from a more familiar
term, anorexia nervosa, health commentators
have begun a campaign to designate muscular hypertrophy
as a new version of body dysmorphic disorder, an
obsessive-compulsive psychological illness. Describing
the symptoms of this alleged disorder, one commentator
stated that "men with the disorder think they are
too small, and they exercise excessively or take
steroids to bulk up."17 Does an active
effort to become stronger and more muscular make
one mentally ill?
Commenting upon the recent recognition of this
medical phenomenon, MESO-Rx author
J. Kevin Thompson,
a professor of clinical psychology, cautions:
Certainly, the decision to engage in bodybuilding
to improve ones appearance or to meet a personal
goal of physical development should not be judged,
either positively or negatively, by the professional
or lay person. It is a personal and private
matter. Indeed, there is no doubt that physical
activity in its many and diverse forms may greatly
contribute to enhanced self-esteem.18
Thompson further observes that "work in this
area is just emerging and much of the research has
the 'pathologizing' flavor of so much of mental
health research (i.e., researchers focus on the
psychological problems vs. the positive health associations)."19
Nevertheless, it appears that the popular news media
has already seized upon this diagnosis and, fueled
by its preexisting prejudice towards strength and
muscle, is well on its way to labeling bodybuilders
as psychologically deviant.
- Strength, Muscle and Criminality
The most jaundiced view of strength and muscle
may come from the perception of its relationship
to criminal behavior. Quite simply, people tend
to fear those who are strong and muscular.
Because some violent criminals are, indeed, strong
and muscular, this fear is not completely unfounded;
however, it has become so deeply ingrained in our
social consciousness that many people distrust anyone
who has these characteristics, regardless of other
facts and circumstances.
In 1949, William H. Sheldon, the father of "somatotyping,"
examined the relationship of body types to juvenile
delinquency, and in his rating of 200 delinquent
boys, he found a strong association between mesomorphy
(muscularity) and "assertiveness and uninhibited
action" amongst the boys.20 Later studies
of adult males in state penitentiaries, particularly
the most violent criminals, also found a high incidence
of mesomorphic body types.21 These findings
merely confirm a fallacy in public perception known
as "affirming the consequent": bad guys are big
and strong, so big, strong guys must be bad.
In recent years, the fear of strong, muscular
criminals has manifested itself in the legislative
action to remove weight-training facilities from
correctional institutions. Over the objections of
corrections officials, including guards who deal
directly with weightlifting prisoners, state and
federal legislators have responded to public demand
for prohibition of weight-training equipment in
jails and prisons. In the State of Ohio, all weight-training
equipment has been banned in local jails and regional
correctional facilities, and free weights have been
prohibited in state penal facilities, allowing only
the use of selectorized strength-training equipment
for limited periods.22 In federal correctional
institutions, this trend has moved more slowly;
however, the No Frills Prison Act seeks to ban "training
equipment for any martial art or bodybuilding or
weightlifting equipment" from all federal correctional
facilities, and that bill has been referred to the
Subcommittee on Crime of the House Judiciary Committee.23
Some concerned citizens argue that weight training
will allow prisoners to overpower and intimidate
guards, and that it serves to release stronger criminals
back into society; they also argue that weight training
equipment can be used as weapons against guards
and as tools for escape.24 Although these
concerns are not unfounded, the public appears to
harbor serious misconceptions about the true results
to prison weightlifting programs, and many of the
suggested alternatives are not as effective as critics
might believe.
Suggestions have been made that weightlifting
equipment provides deadly weapons to inmates, and
that adequate exercise can be provided through other
recreational activities that do not involve such
inherently dangerous instrumentalities.25
Although weightlifting equipment has been
used as weapons in correctional settings, this answer
is not as simple as it seems. On August 14, 1986,
an inmate at the Wayne County Jail in Wooster, Ohio,
staged an escape with four other inmates where a
jail guard received near-fatal injuries after being
beaten with a dumbbell and a "tension bar" exercise
device.26 Ironically enough, on April
23, 1993, immediately before the end of the nationally-televised
siege at Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in
Lucasville, Ohio, that same inmate was beaten to
death with a baseball bat which had been removed
from the prison recreational supplies.27
The simple truth is that if prisoners wish to fashion
deadly weapons, they will find something
that works. So much for the safety of other recreational
equipment.
Contrary to popular belief, many corrections
officials, including guards, strongly support weightlifting
in prisons. It can be used as a privilege which
may be withdrawn as a punishment for negative behavior,
and it can teach discipline and improve self esteem;
furthermore, it occupies inmates' leisure time,
which might be devoted to more nefarious activities.28
Nevertheless, state and federal legislators are
more interested in the public's fear of bigger,
stronger criminals, and legislative action continues.
Society's negative attitude toward strength and
muscle appears to be the combined effect of many
factors, including the publics distaste for women
with muscle; its curious regard for muscular older
men; its shunning of the strength culture; and its
ever-increasing view of muscle as deviant and criminal.
Given these social pressures, why would anyone want
to be strong and muscular, and more to the point,
why would they want to risk the use of anabolic
steroids in reaching that goal? Perhaps the answer
lies in the unspoken expression of society's more
primitive desires and needs.
Does Modern Society Send Conflicting
Messages on Strength and Muscle?
Despite open disdain for the culture of muscle,
there exists an underlying appreciation and demand
for the same. Popular sports require substantial
degrees of strength at all levels: professional,
collegiate, and adolescent. Furthermore, physical
appearance is important. The sexual attraction
inherent in the human mating process favors strength
and muscle, not only with respect to men, but also
to a lesser extent, as to women. Contrary to the
conventional belief that these primitive traits
are irrelevant in a modern civilized society, our
attraction to strength and muscle is inherent in
our nature, and it still serves as a very powerful
motivator in our social transactions.
- Strength and Muscle in Sports
America's appreciation for sports has not waned
as we move into the new millennium. Professional
sports heroes are still receiving contracts and
salaries in sums which are far beyond the wildest
dreams of the average person, and professional sports
franchises have become the most prized possessions
of our wealthiest citizens. Of course, the public's
demand for excellence in sporting competition is
not without a price; those who participate in these
sports are expected to win, and obtaining
the "winning edge" often involves the use of AAS.
Steve Courson, a former offensive lineman for
the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers,
is now suing the NFL players' benefit fund for disability
benefits due to his enlarged heart, which he claims
was the result of AAS use, a professional necessity
during his NFL career.29 Courson has
said that he recalls thinking, "If I don't take
them, I'm risking my job security."30
Strength is essential to a professional offensive
lineman, and the exercise of that superior strength
is demanded by the fans.
Olympic athletes face the same pressures. National
attention is directed at their achievements, and
they are expected to win, not only on their behalf
and that of their team, but on behalf of their
nation. Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson was stripped
of his gold medal after the 1988 Olympic Games when
he tested positive for the use of anabolic steroids.31
However, as observed by Meso-Rx author
Brent Allen, it is
interesting to note the comment of his competitor,
Carl Lewis, before the Senate hearings on the Anabolic
Steroid Control Act of 1990:
The steroids made that much of an impact
over a 7-year period in his [Ben Johnson's]
career. We are talking about someone who went
from possibly 50th or 60th in the world to No.
1 in the world, setting world records.32
It seems clear that Johnson's success was the
result of AAS use. But was that AAS use fueled only
by a personal desire to succeed, or was it the product
of national expectations? Would athletes such as
Courson and Johnson, with the advantage of hindsight,
choose to sacrifice Super Bowl rings and Olympic
gold medals in exchange for athletic mediocrity?
It's doubtful, very doubtful.
Expectations of athletic excellence are not limited
to professional and Olympic athletes. Statistics
accumulated by the National Criminal Justice Reference
Service have shown that, in 1993, 1.2% of high school
seniors had used AAS within the last twelve months.33
The United States Justice Department found that
figure to have increased to 1.7% by 1998.34
By 1984, 20% of college athletes were using steroids.35
While these figures may alarm some, they are indicative
of the expectations placed on high school and college
athletes; the use of AAS may be a small sacrifice
when sports scholarships and professional draft
choices are at stake.
- Strength and Muscle in Physical Appearance
While mainstream American society may exhibit
disdain for the culture of muscle, we are as obsessed
as ever with physical appearance. The presence of
substantial muscle is an essential element of physical
appearance for men, and to a large extent, for women,
too. But most of us know that the exercise devices
touted on late-night infomercials do not provide
the muscular look which we desire and which most
of society secretly craves. AAS do.
Muscularity at its most extreme is exemplified
by bodybuilding competitions. Some competitions,
such as the AAU Mr. USA, demand that competitors
be drug free for extended periods of time; however,
the most elite professional competitions, such as
the IFBB Mr. Olympia, do not test for AAS use, nor
do they require that competitors be free of the
same.36 While "all natural" bodybuilding
is growing in popularity, it seems that the "best
of the best" still use AAS.
Mainstream ideals of physical attractiveness
also stress mesomorphic builds. In one study involving
men's and women's ideals of attractive male somatotypes,
women emphasized lean/broad-shouldered and average/balanced
male types, while men showed more appreciation for
the muscular bulk male type; however, both groups
perceived that the media promoted stereotypic male
muscularity.37 Although this study indicates
gender differences in self-reported personal preferences,
the more revealing truth may be found in the unified
belief regarding media-promoted somatotypes.
Market success depends on well-targeted advertising,
and the advertising which is best directed at the
buyer's ego is that which will sell the product,
often without regard to the products quality. With
regard to muscularity and men's egos, this seems
to be of great importance in underwear advertisements.
One need look no further than the advertisements
for Jockey underwear to see that muscularity is
important.38 Although the models for
underwear advertisements do not usually exhibit
the type of muscle associated with competitive bodybuilders,
they do show a level of mesomorphy well beyond that
of the normal man.
While many women claim to favor men of average
builds, an examination of what they find to be sexually
titillating belies that notion. A good indicator
of those secret cravings is the appearance of male
exotic dancers, i.e., strippers. Promotional
photographs of male dancer Jeff DeCosta,39
former-Chippendale Robert Lopez,40 and
Exoticomm male dancers "GQ" and "Maverick"41
tell the tale. While male dancers such as these
would not qualify for the Mr. Olympia competition,
they are far more muscular than the average male
which many women claim to prefer. For women to deny
their sexual attraction to these muscular male dancers
is like men denying that they prefer buxom female
strippers: the truth is told by what really sells.
And let's all face facts: the average man sees
what type of physique turns the heads of wives and
girlfriends when they are together in public.
It is unquestionable that the physiques of many
male models and exotic dancers, like the performance
of many elite athletes, are enhanced by the use
of AAS. It is also clear that a strong athletic
performance and muscular appearance is expected,
if not mandated, of those who engage in these activities
as their livelihood. Does it not follow that these
social expectations continue to influence the use
of the same drugs which society condemns?
Conclusion
As a civilized society, we seek to ignore or
deny our more primitive side. Yet that side of our
individual personalities is alive and well, and
an essential component of that Freudian id
is our attraction to strength and muscle. This undeniable
aspect of our personalities conflicts with our more
civilized goals of intelligence and reason over
brute strength, and of discouraging disdain for
the physically unattractive. So as a society, what
are we to do?
We live in an age where notions of personal accountability
and expectations of personal excellence have been
exchanged for compassion and inclusiveness. We also
live in a society where the people look to government
for legislation which relieves our social discomfort.
Conflicts in our outlook on many social issues have
led to the demonization of inanimate objects related
to those issues, including firearms, pornography,
the Internet, and of course, drugs. And when it
comes to our ambivalent attitude toward strength
and muscle, drugs are the perfect scapegoat.
Strength and muscle make many people uncomfortable.
Anabolic-androgenic steroids, by definition, promote
strength and muscle. And despite blatant deficiencies
in the popular belief that even limited AAS use
is dangerous, we have been told by our government
and the medical community that these drugs are "bad."
Thus, in 1990, the criminalization process began,
and the demonization of AAS was complete. Nevertheless,
we are still besieged with news of positive drug
tests amongst athletes, hearings before Congress,
and new myths of how AAS caused the death of every
strong and muscular celebrity who passes on. While
it appears that the use of AAS may still be on the
rise, the criminalization of these drugs has done
little to prevent that; it merely changes users
into criminals. The solution is flawed ... but don't
expect it to change.
Notes
1 Judges 13-16.
2 Brooks JR; The pecs
that launched a thousand gyms [http://www.theglobeandmail.com/gam/Health/20000111/HE11ATLA.html]
The Globe and Mail. 11 Jan 2000.
3 U.S. CONST. amend.
XXVII [proposed]. The proposed 27th Amendment, which
guaranteed equal treatment under the law on the
basis of sex, was passed by Congress and submitted
to the States on March 22, 1972. However, after
ten years, it still fell at least three short of
the required ratifications by 38 states legislatures.
4 Scott-Dixon, K. The
bodybuilding grotesque: the female bodybuilder,
gender transgressions, and designations of deviance.
[http://www.mesomorphosis.com/articles/scott-dixon/grotesque.htm]
Mesomorphosis. 15 Dec. 1998.
5 Whyte, G. Ms Olympia
cancelled - thoughts? Usenet:misc.fitness.weights.
[http://www.deja.com/getdoc.xp?AN=523430201&fmt=text]
10 Sep 1999.
6 Ryckman RM; Dill
DA; Dyer NL; Sanborn JW; Gold JA. Social perceptions
of male and female extreme mesomorphs. J Soc
Psychol. 1992 Oct;132(5):615-27.
7 Kirkendall DT; Garrett
WE Jr. The effects of aging and training on skeletal
muscle. Am J Sports Med. 1998 Jul-Aug;26(4):598-602.
8 Id.
9 Häkkinen K; Kallinen
M; Linnamo V; Pastinen UM; Newton RU; Kraemer WJ.
Neuromuscular adaptations during bilateral versus
unilateral strength training in middle-aged and
elderly men and women. Acta Physiol Scand.
1996 Sep;158(1):77-88.
10 Kirkpatrick SW;
Sanders DM. Body image stereotypes: a developmental
comparison. J Genet Psychol. 1978 Mar;132(1st
Half):87-95.
11 Hosting a world
championship: a contest promoters guide and contract.
[http://www.ipf.com/tech/champ_manual.htm]
IPF Newsletter. 23 Sep 1999.
12 Mr. Olympia contest
winners. [http://www.getbig.com/results/e-mroly.htm]
Joe Weider's Olympia. 1999.
13 Gund Arena: attendance
history 1994-1995. [http://www.mediacity.com/~csuppes/NBA/misc/index.htm?../
ClevelandCavaliers/index.htm] Arenas by Muncey
& Suppes. 18 Jul 1999.
14 Ong, DT. Please
advise a new guy. Usenet:misc.fitness.weights.
[http://www.deja.com/[ST_rn=ps]/getdoc.xp?AN=555639043&fmt=text]
2 Dec 1999.
15 Anonymous (strat81).
Wanna get started lifting... Usenet:misc.fitness.weights.
[http://www.deja.com/[ST_rn=ps]/getdoc.xp?AN=461011467&fmt=text]
30 Mar 1999.
16 Anonymous (KaptenKman).
Starting on the right foot. Usenet:misc.fitness.weights.
[http://www.deja.com/[ST_rn=ps]/getdoc.xp?AN=353425193&fmt=text]
15 May 1998.
17 Gordon S. Bigger
isnt always better. [http://www.healthscout.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/Af.woa/3/wo/
0C50008S200UN200RG/1.0.7.5.62.3.3.7.2.3.1]
HealthSCOUT. 11 Jan 2000.
18 Thompson JK. Body
image, bodybuilding, and cultural ideals of muscularity.
[http://www.mesomorphosis.com/articles/thompson/body-image-and-bodybuilding.htm]
Mesomorphosis. 30 Aug 1999.
19 Id.
20 Carter JEL; Heath
BH. Somatotyping: Developments and Applications.
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press,1990.
21 Id.
22 Ohio Revised Code
§341.41, 753.31 and 5145.30.
23 H.R. 370, 106th
Cong., 1st Sess., 2 (1999).
24 Polson G. List of
issues concerning weightlifting in prisons. [http://www.strengthtech.com/correct/issues/listing/listing.htm]
Strength Tech. 27 Feb 1999.
25 Id.
26 State v. Sommers
(Aug.26, 1987), Wayne App. No. 2242, unreported.
27 State v. Robb
(Apr.30, 1998), Franklin App. Nos. 95AP08-1003 and
95AP08-1108, unreported.
28 Polson G. List of
issues concerning weightlifting in prisons, supra.
29 Willing R. Courson
fights steroid ruling. [http://www.usatoday.com/sports/football/sfn/sfnd012.htm]
USA Today. 6 Jun 1999.
30 The explosion of
300-lbers: burgers, barbells, and genetics ... or
modern chemistry? [http://www.musculardevelopment.com/may98/300lb.html]
All Natural Muscular Development. 1998.
31 Bilder R. Drug testing
in sport. [http://www.gemini.co.uk/gemini/biopages/article/art-drug.html]
Gemini Biopages. 1995.
32 Allen, B. A "bizarre"
look at steroid contradictions. [http://www.mesomorphosis.com/exclusive/allen/bizarre.htm]
Mesomorphosis. 30 Aug 1999.
33 Drug and crime facts,
1994. [http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/dcfacts.txt]
NCJRS. 1994.
34 Bureau of Justice
Statistics drug and crime facts: drug use in the
general population. [http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/dcf/du.htm]
USDOJ-BJS. 14 Oct 1999.
35 Smith DA, Perry
PJ. The efficacy of ergogenic agents in athletic
competition. Part I: androgenic-anabolic steroids.
Ann Pharmacother. 1992;26:520-528.
36 Kidwell S. Bodybuilding
competition FAQ version 1.0. [http://nps.ticz.com/bbcfaq.htm]
Natural Physique Systems. 2 Sep 1998.
37 Salusso-Deonier
CJ; Markee NL; Pedersen EL. Gender differences in
the evaluation of physical attractiveness ideals
for male and female body builds. Percept Mot
Skills. 1993 Jun;76(3 Pt 2):1155-67.
38 Mens underwear.
[http://www.jockey.com/sitelogic.cfm?id=245]
Jockey®. (Date unknown).
39 Jeff DeCosta. [http://muscleweb.com/Jeff/]
Muscle Web. 1999.
40 Robert Lopez. [http://muscleweb.com/Robert/]
Muscle Web. 1999.
41 GQ. [http://www.exoticomm.com/images/stripads/gq01.gif];
Maverick. [http://www.exoticomm.com/images/stripads/maver01.gif]
Exoticomm. 29 Nov 1999.
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