Unpacking ‘Fascist Fitness’ & Reclaiming Gym Culture from the Far Right - Colin Davis | Rapid Response #15
Deep Dives
Explore related topics with these Wikipedia articles, rewritten for enjoyable reading:
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Muscular Christianity
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Historical movement connecting physical fitness with Christian moral virtue that directly informs modern debates about masculinity, strength training, and political identity discussed in the article
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Manosphere
11 min read
The article explicitly references the manosphere and male-centric podcasters as vectors for right-wing radicalization of young men through fitness culture
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Physical culture
8 min read
Historical movement from the 19th-20th century that established the ideological foundations of modern gym culture, providing context for how fitness became politically coded
Welcome to the Urgent Futures podcast, the show that finds {signals} in the noise. Each week, I sit down with leading thinkers whose research, concepts, and questions clarify the chaos, from culture to the cosmos.
If you want to participate in the Lives, ask questions of the guests I bring on, etc., do us both a favor and subscribe now and make sure Reality Studies isn’t getting filtered in your inbox. That way you can join me for my next live video in the app:
Audio versions of this episode can be found here on Substack, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify.
(Speaking of audio, I’m sorry in advance for my blown-out audio. Substack, it seems, did me dirty. I’ve never had this problem in the past, but I’m trying to get to the bottom of it for future Live episodes. Fortunately Colin does most of the talking.)
My guest today is Colin Davis.
Colin Davis is a fitness coach and content creator from North Carolina. Colin has been a coach for 6 years and makes content focused on gym culture and its connection to politics. Colin’s work centers around creating a voice for left leaning individuals in the fitness community and combatting gym bro stereotypes.
In many ways, the big story in the aftermath of the 2024 election in the U.S. was: young men. Mainstream media was aflurry in conversations about how the Dems lost boys, how the manosphere and male-centric podcasters swung the election in favor of Donald Trump. Correlated to this phenomenon was the fact that gym culture, weightlifting in particular, because an online vector through which young men developed communities within the right-wing ecosystem. Ideas about power and “being a man” became key talking points in these groups.
But it didn’t—and doesn’t—have to be this way. I’m reminded of country music’s deep roots in working class struggles, and how genre has drifted rightward over the past few decades. We may take for granted that weightlifting will breed toxic masculinity, but this is not a given. Today’s guest, Colin Davis, a fitness coach based in North Carolina, is testament to this. I found his work through some banger short-form videos where he thoughtfully (and punchily) shows how strength and masculinity might be unapologetically otherwise. And there’s an appetite for it too—over the ...
This excerpt is provided for preview purposes. Full article content is available on the original publication.
