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Arnold's speech....

big in vegas

MuscleChemistry Registered Member
Anyone else see this?? Wonder what he'll do now, hopefully he gets back into decent shape. Hard to believe The Oak is a former governor now

It was billed as an afternoon with the former governor of California, but the lunch-hour speech Wednesday was all about Arnold Schwarzenegger the bodybuilder and Hollywood actor, who mused about success, liposuction and girly men.

This is not a policy speech, he warned the crowd.

“I don’t want you to fall asleep here,” he said.

The Toronto speech appeared to be the same one he gave Tuesday at an event in Calgary, but didn’t disappoint the new audience, as they laughed at jokes about his accent and applauded when he said, “I’ll be back.”

Schwarzenegger was also in Winnipeg on Tuesday night and will be in Montreal on Thursday — his first public speaking engagements since leaving office in California. He recently completed the maximum two terms for state leaders in the U.S.

The bodybuilder-turned-actor-turned-politician played to his celebrity appeal, making references to movies “Junior” and “The Terminator,” in which he was naked.

“Can you imagine Sarah Palin being naked?” he asked the audience. “No, don’t imagine that.”

Frank McKenna, deputy chairman of TD Bank Financial Group and former New Brunswick premier, did steer Schwarzenegger toward politics during the question and answer session, asking for his thoughts on the extreme polarization plaguing American politics.

“I am concerned about the partisanship that is going on right now in America,” Schwarzenegger said. “The way the Democrats and Republicans have been fighting, it’s absolutely outrageous. It’s embarrassing.”

Schwarzenegger wouldn’t bite when McKenna asked if he thought former Alaska governor Sarah Palin would be qualified to be U.S. president. But the Republican politician said he was never opposed to working with Democratic President Barack Obama.

“I made it very clear to them that I’m more than happy to help in any way possible to aid leadership in clean energy.”

But Schwarzenegger spent the bulk of his speech reflecting on his “remarkable” life story and the keys to his success.

He made no fewer than eight mentions of a “girly man,” a reference to a “Saturday Night Live” skit parodying him, which he described as someone who is afraid to lose so he doesn’t try.

“I (had) tried 10 times to bench press 500 pounds, but the 11th time I did it,” he said. “Great things can happen if you’re not afraid of failure.”

In addition to not being a girly man, other life tips Schwarzenegger offered up included only sleeping six hours a night — “hurry up and sleep already” — not having liposuction and instead going to the gym and not eating dessert.

Breaking the rules and following your own dreams were also part of that philosophy.

Growing up in Austria his mother wanted him to marry a girl named Heidi and have lots of kids like the Von Trapp family in “The Sound of Music,” he said, but he followed his bodybuilding and acting dreams to America.

The speech drew a crowd of thousands, including rock star Gene Simmons. The Kiss bassist and singer, who was in Toronto speaking at a conference, said he was interested to hear Schwarzenegger, as a self-made man who has been a bodybuilding champion, a huge movie star and leader of California.

However, Simmons said he has no personal interest in entering politics.
“I think democracy’s highly overrated,” he said. “I’d rather be a benevolent dictator.”

Politicians such as Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, Liberal MP Ruby Dhalla and former Ontario Progressive Conservative leader John Tory were also in attendance.

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford met with Schwarzenegger before the speech and welcomed him to the city.

The mayor, whose weight has been a target for his detractors, said he has “to get in good shape like him.”

The Canadian Press
 
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