Robin Coleman; strong women/female bodybuilder
Tuesday, September 18, 2007 at 15:56 Robin's new shoot with shemuscle
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World’s Strongest Woman, The Falls, Zambia, 2001
In October of 2001 Robin was able to experience the adventure of her lifetime in Africa to participate in the first ever World's Strongest Woman - the female addition to the 25-years-running World's Strongest Man.




Reader Comments (1)
Alicia Silverstone's first major film was "Crush" (1993), wherein her character, the 14-yr old vixen, Adrienne (Alicia was 17 when she played this role) has a crush on the 28-yr. old tenant of her family guesthouse, Nick. She briefly seduces him, but when spurned, takes Nick and his lady friend, Amy for a spin through hell.
Although it's a trashy B drama (billed as a suspense "thriller"), it's a rather well conceived domination story that works on several levels. It's equally "believable" both from the perspective of a teenage girl with a crush on an older guy, and from the perspective of the older guy with juvenile female sexual fantasies.
Best of all, it portrays the complete emotional, intellectual, social, and, until the very end, physical domination of an older guy by a much younger girl. For commercial reasons, Adrienne is portrayed as a lunatic genius whose devious ways ultimately land her in a mental hospital. This disguises and turns the male fantasy around, and let's the young girls off the hook, too.
It's significant that the person who saves Nick's ass is Adrienne's young frined, Cheyenne, who reveals Adrienne's confessional diary which brings Adrienne's deptions to light, letting Nick off the hook. This is completely dependent on Cheyenne's like for Nick, and is foreshadowed early on. When they first meet, Nick asks "Who goes there, friend or foe"? and Cheyenne answers, "That depends." It's good for Nick that he's nice to Cheyenne.) The point is, Nick's entire fate is under the whim of two adolescent girls.
On a higher level, Adrienne's father in his role as "protector" (she has him wrapped around her little finger, basically) and Cheyenne in her role as Nick's "defender", illustrates how inter-gender behavior is regulated. Men protect women from the aggression of other males, and women protect men from the manipulation (also a form of aggression) of other females.
But do these kinds of things ever happen in real life? If so, what are the consequences in the end? Have you ever known anyone in this situation?
Perhaps Robin Coleman acted like this as a teen? ;-)