Arnold Schwarzenegger has opened up about if he would run for President of the United States.
29.05.2023 - 11:09 / nypost.com
told Men’s Health for its July/August cover story that “people are dying” from abusing performance-enhancing drugs. When the 75-year-old was a bodybuilder in the 1970s, he said he legally did a regimen of testosterone and D-Bol under the supervision of a doctor. “Bodybuilding always, always was considered a safe sport,” he said. “But now, it’s not. Now people are dying.
They’re dying because of overdoses of drugs, and they don’t know what the f— they’re doing.”He added that people are “listening to charlatans. If I want to go and get medical advice from a legitimate doctor, I go to UCLA, or I go to the Cleveland Clinic.”Steroid use for bodybuilding was banned in the US in 1990, after the Steroids Control Act of 1990 was passed. “Don’t go there,” Schwarzenegger urged. “Yes, we are at a time now, where we always look for the easy way to make money, the fast way to get rich, the easy way to be an influencer.
Any time you abuse the body, you’re going to regret it later on. “I want young people to know that I have seen people getting kidney transplants, and suffering tremendously from it.”He added, comparing himself to a rock climber who tells others not to take risks, “I recognize the fact that, who am I to say this? This is the guy who climbed without a rope.”Schwarzenegger, who’s starring in the Netflix series FUBAR, about a CIA operative, said in an interview earlier this month with the Hollywood Reporter he has no plans of slowing down.“I still work out every day, I ride my bike every day, and I make movies — show business is another part of my life. I add in my life, I never subtract,” he explained. “I love everything that I do. There’s no retiring.
Arnold Schwarzenegger has opened up about if he would run for President of the United States.
Arnold Schwarzenegger is ready to get into politics again. The Hollywood star says he “could win” the presidential election if he was eligible to run, as he has many ideas from his previous experience as governor of California between 2003 and 2011, and thinks he could “bring the nation together.”The 75-year-old actor would not be eligible as a candidate as he was born in Austria, and he is required to be a natural-born US citizen to participate in the election. During a recent conversation with Chris Wallace, the star was asked if he would consider running for president if he was allowed.
Zack Sharf Digital News Director Arnold Schwarzenegger would throw his name into the race for U.S. president if he was eligible, the actor and former California governor told Chris Wallace on a recent episode of Max and CNN’s “Who’s Talking?” interview series. The action movie icon already has a history in U.S. politics, as he served as the 38th governor of California from 2003 to 2011. “The Constitution says that the President has to be a natural born US citizen. If not for that, would you have run for president?” Wallace asked Schwarzenegger. “Well, yes, of course,” Schwarzenegger responded. “I mean, I think the field was wide open in 2016. And I think the field is open right now. I mean, think about it right now. I mean, who is there? There is really not a person that can bring everyone together. Who is here today that people say okay, he’s not too old or he’s not too this or too that, or is that because it’s now a question about who do you vote against then who do you vote for?”
Arnold Schwarzenegger has said that he would run for president now if he could, saying that he could “see so clearly” how he would win.The action star – who was born in Austria and moved to the US in 1968 before becoming a US citizen in 1983 – is not eligible to run, but said it would be “a no brainer” if he could.“The Constitution says that the President has to be a natural born US citizen. If not for that, would you have run for president?” Schwarzenegger was asked in an episode of Who’s Talking to Chris Wallace? which goes live today (June 16).“Well, yes, of course,” the actor responded (via People).
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Netflix documentary “Arnold,” in which he admitted that the Austrian-American actor is the better action star between the one-time rivals.“The ’80s was a very interesting time because the definitive ‘action guy’ had not really been formed yet,” Stallone explained.“Up until that time, action was a car chase like ‘Bullitt’ or ‘The French Connection,’ and a film all about intellect and innuendo and verbal this and verbal that,” he recalled.Stallone then admitted that Schwarzenegger, 75, was a pioneer of the fist-pumping genre, noting that “dialogue was not necessary” in order to tell a story. “You actually relied upon your body to tell the story,” the “First Blood” actor said, before calling him the higher-caliber artist of the two.
Arnold Schwarzenegger is being dissected in Netflix’s new three-part docuseries, Arnold, which looks back on his multipronged career as a bodybuilding champion, California Governor, and movie star. The series is now streaming on the service.
Arnold Schwarzenegger has lived the American dream. He arrived in the United States with little money but a lot of determination, and built a life and career that were the envy of millions. The Austrian-born star even held public office, serving two terms as the governor (or "Governator" as he was dubbed, based on his role in "The Terminator") of California. But for all his success in the world of Hollywood and fitness, Schwarzenegger faced his share of controversies, from affairs to violating city policy. As the icon reflects on his life and career in his new Netflix docuseries, "Arnold," we're looking back at the triumphs and troubles he faced throughout his life.
Arnold Schwarzenegger has opened about his “tough” childhood in a new Netflix docu-series about his life.Arnold covers Schwarzenegger’s acting and political career, featuring interviews with friends and co-stars. In the series, which premiered yesterday (June 7), he calls his father, who was a Nazi party official, a “tyrant”.Speaking about his father, he says he suspected he had many mental health issues.
The man, the myth, the bodybuilding legend. Arnold Schwarzenegger took fans behind the scenes of his rise to fame — and the downfall of his marriage to Maria Shriver — in his new Netflix documentary.
Moving forward! Arnold Schwarzenegger’s ex-wife, Maria Shriver, has “no plans on publicly responding” to the allegations laid out in his new documentary, a source exclusively tells Us Weekly.
Arnold Schwarzenegger has said he “eliminated” his feelings of grief following the deaths of his brother and father. In new three-part Netflix documentary Arnold, the 75-year-old actor discusses his journey to stardom and talks about his home and family life. Speaking about his childhood, the Austrian-born former bodybuilder described this period as being marred by a “strange violence”.
Arnold Schwarzenegger has recalled how his mother once thought he might be gay because he had pictures of oiled-up bodybuilders on his bedroom wall as a teen. In his upcoming Netflix documentary, Arnold, the 75-year-old actor recalled growing up in Austria and dreaming of becoming a professional bodybuilder. The Terminator star reportedly bought American muscles magazines as a teenager and posted half-naked pictures of his heroes to his bedroom wall, which "freaked out" his mother.
Arnold Schwarzenegger is addressing what he has deemed a major failure in his life. In his upcoming Netflix docuseries, , out Wednesday, the 75-year-old blockbuster star revisited the moment he was confronted by his ex-wife, Maria Shriver, about fathering a child with their former housekeeper, Mildred Baena. As he recalled the events in an episode of the series, Arnold and Maria were in a weekly counseling session when their counselor told Arnold that Maria wanted to know if he was the father of Joseph Baena, now 25.
Arnold Schwarzenegger was "made in America". The 75-year-old movie star admits he's not a "self-made man" and that he has lots of people to thank for his success. Arnold – born in Austria but moved to the US to pursue a career in bodybuilding – told Interview magazine: "I always said you can call me anything you want, but don’t call me a self-made man, because I’m not.
Zack Sharf Digital News Director In Netflix’s upcoming Arnold Schwarzenegger documentary series “Arnold,” the actor and former California governor somewhat apologizes for groping women in the past (via Rolling Stone). Five days before the 2003 California governor election, the Los Angeles Times published a report in which six women accused Schwarzenegger of groping and humiliating them. Schwarzenegger said at the time the reports were “made-up” and he “never grabbed anyone,” though he also admitted he “behaved badly sometimes” in the past. “My reaction in the beginning, I was kind of…defensive,” Schwarzenegger now says in the three-part Netflix documentary series. “Today, I can look at it and kind of say, it doesn’t really matter what time it is. If it’s the Muscle Beach days of 40 years ago, or today, that this was wrong. It was bullshit. Forget all the excuses, it was wrong.”
Not a fan. Arnold Schwarzenegger revealed that his time as the governor of California almost never came to be because of his now-ex-wife, Maria Shriver.
From Terminator to Governator! Arnold Schwarzenegger played many roles throughout his impressive career.
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