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    joe-gold
    Who Was Joe Gold?
    by John Romano

    A lot of you have been commenting on how much you enjoy the stories
    from back in the old days at Venice Gold’s and World Gyms. Since this
    era interests some of you I thought it would be fitting to write a
    little bit about the guy who started the whole shebang in Muscle Beach
    during the 70s. Many of you know the name “Gold,” as in Gold’s gym;
    but do you know Joe, the man?

    The late Joe Gold was the cantankerous old man who founded
    both Gold’s and World Gym in Venice Beach in the 60s and 70s. It was
    from those hallowed temples that our industry was hatched. And along the way,
    it’s where the bodybuilding gods were built. Joe Gold is responsible
    for the odd crucible which created the most longed-for love affair with
    bodybuilding in the history of our sport. Joe Weider may have
    popularized bodybuilding in his magazines, but it was Gold who
    built the factories that churned out Weider’s progeny. And if you
    were lucky enough to be working out in one of Gold’s factories during
    their zenith, your life has been changed forever. It’s like you’re soul has
    received the sacrament of bodybuilding offered by its
    creator. There were a lot of great gyms over the years, but no one
    could ever deny that Venice Beach was where the crucial work was being
    done. It was the birthplace of “hardcore” and Joe Gold was its daddy

    Joe opened the first hardcore bodybuilding gym in Venice California in
    1965. He designed and built all his own equipment for his gyms. He
    paid specific attention to the unique needs of bodybuilding and built
    equipment specifically for bodybuilders that were so good that his gyms
    were the destination for just about every noteworthy bodybuilder in
    history, including Arnold. No pantheon of modern bodybuilding would be
    complete today without Joe Gold.

    Every time you stick a pin in a weight stack, or grab the handles on a
    pulley machine, give thanks to Joe; he invented and built the very
    first models. In fact, the entire concept of “machines” that we use
    to build muscle can trace its roots back to Joe Gold. And as
    innovative and technologically advanced as the fitness equipment
    industry has become, there isn’t a manufacturer in business today –
    even with every ounce of state of the art technology at their disposal
    - that can churn out equipment as good for bodybuilding as the pieces
    Joe Gold welded together in his garage in Venice. This is privileged be the
    few who have moved big iron on one of Joe’s machines.

    Joe sold Gold’s Gym in 1970 and it eventually became a huge
    international franchise worth an estimated $160 million today. It
    also grew into quite a rancorous attraction with a transient element
    that invaded the sanctity of those bodybuilders who took themselves a
    little more seriously. Eventually Arnold, Franco and the rest of that
    little original Gold’s Gym clique were able to convince Joe to open
    another gym so they could all train in peace. In 1977, Joe opened
    World Gym in Santa Monica. Immediately such bodybuilding superstars
    as Lou Ferrigno, Frank Zane, Dave Draper, Tom Platz, the Mentzer
    brothers, to name but a few. joined the ranks of Arnold and Franco
    upstairs on Main Street. While Gold’s Gym eventually established
    itself as the center of the bodybuilding universe, no self respecting
    bodybuilder making the trek to Mecca in the late seventies and
    eighties didn’t climb those stairs up from Main Street to train in the
    sunlit hallowed cement block building with the big outside deck facing
    the Pacific. Where else in the world could you train outside with a
    view of the ocean? And where else could you train on such good
    equipment? In fact, all through the eighties, it was very common for
    bodybuilders who belonged to Gold’s to train legs at World because the
    equipment was so much better. I can still remember how smooth Joe’s
    leg press was; it practically lifted itself.

    I trained at World Gym on Main Street from 1979 until Joe threw me out
    in 1983. I’ll always regret that incident. I got thrown out of the
    coolest gym in the country. That story has been told way too many
    times to tell it here again. The important thing is that Joe and I did
    finally make up. From the moment we did, Joe always welcomed me into
    his gym and never charged me. Behind that cranky façade of his, Joe
    was a really good guy – a true bodybuilder – and a great gym operator ;
    maybe the best ever in history. Joe was the boss and he ran his
    gyms lean and mean- mostly with Joe doing the mean part himself- but
    in a tough love kind of way. The bottom line is simply illustrated by an
    anecdotal comparison of the two gyms: At Gold’s Gym the weights were
    all over the place- people left plates loaded on machines and the
    dumbbells were strewn all over and none were in their proper location
    on the rack. World, on the other hand, looked like a magazine ad.
    Every weight was stowed in its proper and corresponding spot and
    every dumbbell not in use was stationed on the rack in its proper
    slot. Joe never turned on the heat, there was no air-conditioning and
    he didn’t give a rat’s ass if you were comfortable or not. All Joe
    cared about is that you respected his gym and its equipment and used
    it with the same pride he used in building it. He liked it when guys
    got in shape and moved big weights. He liked to see his gym working
    and his equipment being used and enjoyed by all. Joe genuinely liked
    his members- he gave most of us nick-names. He liked to see us. He liked
    to laugh with us- sometime at us. There was no denying Joe loved
    being in his gym. So much so that he was there, in the gym, almost all
    the time, right up until the end.

    We all owe Joe Gold our utmost adoration. He started the hardcore gym
    movement and encouraged more bodybuilders than I could count. Even
    Arnold counts Joe Gold as a father figure. There isn’t one of us who
    doesn’t owe him our gratitude. I’ll never forget Joe and I’ll never
    forget how he touched my life. I miss him.

    Article Source: RxMuscle.com