- This topic has 11 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 17 years, 2 months ago by
Grandmaster.
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March 27, 2008 at 3:47 pm #68937
AlexG
KeymasterAs posted yesterday (03/26/08) by HDPhysiques @ Unrealmuscle:
Alicia Miller is the newest addition to HDPhysiques.com. This woman is 165 lbs of pure kick ass. A world Jiu-Jitsu champion, plus massive muscle = lethal combination.
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907)March 27, 2008 at 10:25 pm #68938cpbell0033944
ParticipantShe looks as though she could overpower a lot of men let alone all female competition! 😮 8) Awesome physique!
March 27, 2008 at 10:51 pm #68939Anonymous
GuestHi Guys
She was the US Ju Jitsu light heavy champion in 2000, and I believe won the Worlds a year or two later.
Among the disciplines she was the champion in Ju Jitsu were kumite and free style fighting, the latter being very similar to what you see on UFC today.
Also she is very strong. She benches over 300 (I believe 310) for reps off season.
I doubt many guys, even most MBBs, would stand a chance against her. Regarding women maybe a handful in the world. However as tough as she is on the mats she is one of the sweetest, and funniest, women you will ever meet.
Best
Vas
March 28, 2008 at 9:10 pm #68940BlackKusanagi
ParticipantDefiantly an interesting warrior woman. 😀
April 7, 2008 at 10:14 am #68941Grandmaster
ParticipantShe's a creative inspiration. When the "he-man woman-haters" doubt the abilities of the heroines I'm writing about (as they inevitably will), this is the caliber of woman I'll point them to!
April 7, 2008 at 3:23 pm #68942cpbell0033944
ParticipantFor more inspiration, might I suggest young Kara Mann? 8)
April 7, 2008 at 3:50 pm #68943AlexG
KeymasterWell, in no small regard you can blame the pop-culture factory of Hollyweird for why they might feel that way with them constantly having implausible looking (short and
smalltiny in build) women beating the crap out of guys in movies/tv who are far larger, vastly outweigh and overwhelming would be stronger then them in the real world.We've come a long way – regressed backwards, from the era of Linda Hamilton in T2, in which she had a plausible appearance (and character-wise, the mental toughness) to physically take on and take out her male opponents.
She's a creative inspiration. When the "he-man woman-haters" doubt the abilities of the heroines I'm writing about (as they inevitably will), this is the caliber of woman I'll point them to!
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907)April 8, 2008 at 8:10 pm #68944cpbell0033944
ParticipantWell, in no small regard you can blame the pop-culture factory of Hollyweird for why they might feel that way with them constantly having implausible looking (short and [s]small[/s] tiny in build) women beating the crap out of guys in movies/tv who are far larger, vastly outweigh and overwhelming would be stronger then them in the real world.
We've come a long way – regressed backwards, from the era of Linda Hamilton in T2, in which she had a plausible appearance (and character-wise, the mental toughness) to physically take on and take out her male opponents.
Interesting to read an authority on the subject such as yourself saying what I've thought for a good while now. Surely it has now passed the point where it could be just dismissed as a passing backlash against the Hamilton/Moore/Weaver effect?
April 8, 2008 at 11:46 pm #68945Lingster
KeymasterWhose idea was it for Kara Mann to pull a Subaru?
April 8, 2008 at 11:50 pm #68946Grandmaster
ParticipantWhose idea was it for Kara Mann to pull a Subaru?
Not her chiropractor's.
Well, in no small regard you can blame the pop-culture factory of Hollyweird for why they might feel that way with them constantly having implausible looking (short and [s]small[/s] tiny in build) women beating the crap out of guys in movies/tv who are far larger, vastly outweigh and…would be stronger then them in the real world.
And the fact that, when present–larger, capable women are portrayed as undesirable (psychologically and socially) within the context of their storylines. But I don't blame Hollywood if people can't (won't?) separate reality from fantasy. Commercial media has been used to manipulate people into buying products and maintaining the status quo of capitalist societies since day one. There's bound to be confusion if one takes his social cues from deceptive media of any kind.
We've come a long way – regressed backwards, from the era of Linda Hamilton in T2, in which she had a plausible appearance (and character-wise, the mental toughness) to physically take on and take out her male opponents.
That "mental toughness" was branded psychosis and plot-wise, caused problems for the other characters in the film. Her ruthlessness and singular focus was meant to be frightening and out-of-control. Yes, Hamilton was an obvious excellent physical specimen at the time, and in hindsight, the impetus for the few buff heroines (and actresses) that emerged in the mid-Nineties, but Sarah Connor as a character was never meant to be admired for her appearance or abilities by people who don't like muscular women. She was a pit bull, and the teen John Connor was her choke chain. Unless I missed it, we still have not seen the admirable muscular female character–that is, admirable to the other characters–as the lead in a mainstream film.
I do believe that the majority of men (who I'd unequivocally describe as "normal") are simply afraid of women who look any part of physically capable. If not psychologically/physically (chemically?) afraid, at least fearful of having their role suborned by the being who's "naturally" supposed to be subordinate (whether we're talking about physical strength, social status, providence, or Providence)–the female. I see it again and again. So-called "men" expressing fear of muscular women. "She makes me afraid"–it's so off-the-cuff as to be cliché. It doesn't seem to be particular to Hollywood suits, age group, or a particular culture or background.
The other camp is occupied by men who are only interested in women for their sexuality, and if they're not attracted to a particular woman, they've no interest in what she can do, has done, or has to say. Their loss.
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