logo
‘Talking sh*t': 22yo slams act at local gym

‘Talking sh*t': 22yo slams act at local gym

Daily Telegraph03-05-2025
Don't miss out on the headlines from Fitness. Followed categories will be added to My News.
Welcome to You Got This, news.com.au's weekly fitness series featuring stories and ideas from real women who've experienced it all.
An avid gymgoer has called out a couple who made snide comments about her standard exercise routine.
Kiahny, 22, is an area manager for another fitness chain but the most local version of that gym is an hour away, prompting her to join a different studio closer to home.
She signed up at the beginning of March, and attends whenever she is at home instead of having to make the hour-long commute.
The NSW woman said she had been training in gyms since she was 16, and was recently filming herself perform a Romanian dead lift. The move involved holding weights and hinging at the hips while keeping her knees straight.
It's an exercise used to strengthen the posterior chain.
'It was the first day of my new program, because I have a coach, and I'd gone in and set up my RDLs,' she told news.com.au, adding she was filming to get approval on her form.
She completed a warm-up set with just the bar, before adding more and more weight to it. At that point an older couple started to set up on the equipment behind where Kiahny was performing her RDLs.
'I started hearing them say a few things about my exercise and how it was right in front of them,' she said.
'I ignored it a little bit and it wasn't until I'd gone back and started listening to the video I realised there was a lot more to it.'
Kiahny is an area manager for a gym. Picture: Supplied
She said she'd set up the barbell first, but they were implying that somehow Kiahny was in the wrong and doing an 'unusual' exercise. She said at no point had the couple asked her about the exercise, and she said if they had then it would have been a non-issue.
'The way it was coming across was that I was somehow being inappropriate. There were a lot of comments about 'This is not the machine to be using' and things like that because they were right behind me,' she said.
'They were making it out like I was a problem for doing an exercise in front of them — even though I was there first and it wasn't a crazy exercise.'
She said she was wearing standard gym shorts, and not bikini bottoms.
Kiahny took to TikTok to share a small snippet of the two-minute interaction, with many commenting their shock at the behaviour.
She was doing RDLs. Picture: TikTok/@kiahny
She joined a different gym, closer to home, and faced odd criticism from other members. Picture: Supplied
'It's the gym? what else are you meant to be doing? I'm genuinely confused,' one said.
Another added: 'The way this would give me anxiety for 6 months if I ever heard this in my video recording.'
'This is so normal to me, I'm struggling to understand what their issue is,' one social media user said.
Another person commented: 'He's trying to hard to convince his gf that he's not mirin your gains.'
Someone else weighed in: 'No are we all just having rough times in the gym at the moment. I swear I've been training on and off for six to eight years but this year has been BAD for older people just being AWFUL.'
She's called out the behaviour. Picture: Supplied
Kiahny said she was surprised about how many people reached out to her with similar stories, with one telling her that someone approached her at the gym and told her she needed to do more cardio to lose weight.
It shocked the fitness professional, who said gyms are a place where people go to better themselves and you have no idea why someone is there.
'To have people like this in the gym who are commenting on and putting other people down, I feel like it's such a dangerous thing because it really impacts how someone has seen the gym,' she said.
On the work side of things, she said she'd never witnessed or heard of behaviour like this. She said positive gym atmosphere is so important and it needed to be a safe space, adding that negative gym culture is outdated, and so the experience she had and the messages she got were a shock to her.
Kiahny said for anyone who has experienced this, at the end of the day if people are saying something negative it's likely coming from an internal place and was no reflection of the target of the comment.
Originally published as 'Outdated' gym act caught on camera
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scott Cam unleashes on Block contestant: ‘Readjust your attitude'
Scott Cam unleashes on Block contestant: ‘Readjust your attitude'

Courier-Mail

time28 minutes ago

  • Courier-Mail

Scott Cam unleashes on Block contestant: ‘Readjust your attitude'

Don't miss out on the headlines from Reality. Followed categories will be added to My News. There were tense scenes on Wednesday's episode of The Block when host Scott Cam confronted one contestant, advising her to 'readjust (her) attitude' to the show's cast and crew. An episode earlier, WA contestant Han had clashed with The Block foreman Dan, after she went ahead with an unapproved change to her floor plan that he wasn't happy about. It wasn't the first time Dan had accused her of charging ahead with works without his approval, but this time Han wasn't having it – she accused him of manufacturing problems 'for the camera' and angrily insisted the entire thing was a stitch-up. Never miss the latest entertainment news from Australia and around the world — download the app direct to your phone. Han in Tuesday's episode, accusing The Block of stitching her up. A day on, and in his weekly walkarounds with Shelley Craft, Scott Cam visited Han and her partner Can (Dan, Han, Can and Cam – yes, this is a deeply confusing season for Block drama), and let her know he wasn't going to accept those accusations. 'Now, I've got a few things I need to say. Han, I hear some people saying that you're accusing us of a stitch-up and doing things just for camera. I've told you many, many times: We never set you up to fail. We never stitch you up. We help you along the way, and we've always helped you along the way,' he told her. Scott Cam was firm: Fix your attitude. Addressing her unapproved changes – this time, moving the floorplan – Cam told her: 'You're making decisions that are affecting you – you're making those decisions, not us. You're not a builder, so don't make decisions that are going to affect your build. And don't accuse us of trying to stitch you up and doing stuff just for camera, because we don't do that.' He finished his dressing down with a firm request of Han. 'So, now I'm going to ask you really nicely to readjust your attitude on this show. To the crew, to Dan, to me and to everyone around you … OK?' Han's response to the dressing down: 'Heard.' Han's two-word reply? 'Yeah. Heard.' She had more to say to the cameras when Cam had gone, though, saying the whole episode had been 'unfair' on her: 'I actually don't think I need an attitude readjustment. It's not an attitude problem.' There was a happy ending for this particular Block clash, though: Later in the episode, Han grabbed Cam for a one-on-one chat, apologising and insisting she never intentionally set out to break any of the show's rules. Cam accepted the apology and the pair agreed to move forward. Originally published as Scott Cam unleashes on Block contestant: 'Readjust your attitude'

Naked Gun: Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson keep laughs coming in dumb comedy reboot
Naked Gun: Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson keep laughs coming in dumb comedy reboot

Courier-Mail

time3 hours ago

  • Courier-Mail

Naked Gun: Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson keep laughs coming in dumb comedy reboot

Don't miss out on the headlines from Movies. Followed categories will be added to My News. With a supremely silly but successful reboot and a suss sequel to a sleeper hit that should have been left alone, it's a mixed bag on the big screen this week Rumoured real-life love interests Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson star in The Naked Gun. Picture: Getty Images THE NAKED GUN (M) Director: Akiva Schaffer Starring: Liam Neeson, Pamela Anderson, Danny Huston, Paul Walter Hauser. ***1/2 Those who appreciate the refined art of the dumb comedy will not only be relieved, but will also genuinely rejoice in the knowledge that The Naked Gun brings the funny. The trilogy of 1990s Naked Guns starring the late, great Leslie Nielsen is remembered fondly by anyone who owned a broad sense of humour in that era. Sure, those movies were hardly classics of the form. However, Nielsen's deliriously deadpan delivery and the singular stupidity awash in every scene was a potently irresistible combo. As for the reboot, it wisely does not dare mess about with the franchise's winningly wince-worthy formula. The audaciously against-type casting of the decidedly non-comic actor Liam Neeson as Lt. Frank Drebin Jr. (yes, he is playing Nielsen's son here) is a guilty-pleasure gift that just keeps giving from start to finish. Neeson hits his punchlines with such incongruously misplaced confidence that you will often find yourself laughing before he has fully completed the joke. Pamela Anderson in a scene from the new The Naked Gun. Pamela Anderson plays Beth Davenport in The Naked Gun. Picture: Paramount Pictures Neeson might be one of those actors who deliberately downgraded himself from decorated to desecrated a long time ago (around the time of the original Naked Guns, he was basking in the acclaim of the title role of Schindler's List). Nevertheless, he nails the deceptively difficult assignment of both keeping a straight face and keeping an audience chuckling hard with perfect aplomb. While Lt. Drebin works on cracking his latest case both with and without the blessing of his fellow Los Angeles police officers, he is fated to cross paths with the likes of a fetching femme fatale (a game, if awkward Pamela Anderson) and a sappy, Elon Musk-ish supervillain (Danny Huston). Away from the goofily oblivious work of its leading man, the new Naked Gun earns its keep through the sheer weight of number of gags it shoots across the screen. If you don't particularly like one joke, you don't have to wait too long (an average of about five-to-seven seconds actually) for the next to come along. A majority of these sure shots of silliness coming at you land right on target. This Naked Gun is not in the business of firing blanks. The Naked Gun is now showing in general release. Riz Ahmed as a mysterious fixer in the thriller Relay RELAY (M) *** General release. You're getting two movies for the price of one here. However, chances are you will only be happy with half the deal on offer. Relay hits the ground running as a fiercely intelligent modern thriller, in which a conscientious whistleblower, Sarah (Lily James), is targeted by her former corporate overlords. Unable to intimidate her into shutting up, these shadowy business types have no choice but to buy Sarah's silence from a mysterious broker who specialises in such sensitive deals. His name is Ash (Riz Ahmed), and he has an ingenious method of preserving complete anonymity: he can only be contacted via a confidential phone service that makes and takes calls of behalf of the deaf. Though it may read as a strange premise on paper, the movie summons great intrigue and tension from the intricate ways in which Ash uses this analog tech to shield Sarah from a crack digital surveillance team (headed by an excellent Sam Worthington). Some grippingly smart plotting pays off with a magnificent shock twist, but unfortunately it's all downhill for Relay after that. All of the sudden, the production halves its IQ and becomes a clunkily predictable (and at times, illogical) chase flick we've all seen too many times before. A solid effort that falls short of realising its full potential. Bob Odenkirk's (centre) Nobody 2 is not a patch on the original. NOBODY 2 (MA15+) ** General release. The original Nobody detonated such an explosive burst of brilliance that was always going to be tough to match. This obligatory sequel confirms the suspicion the whole Nobody effect should have been strictly a one-and-done thing. If you missed the first, well, that was the movie where the great Bob Odenkirk (from that amazing series Better Call Saul) impressively transformed himself from lowly, down-and-out dad to top-flight, up-and-at-'em killing machine. While Odenkirk's Hutch remains a reliable magnet for snappy wisecracks and zappy combat situations, the movie around him is never quite as funny nor exciting as it really should be. The decision to frame the action around Hutch taking his family on a holiday that swiftly places all in mortal danger should have been a winning one. However, the vibe the filmmakers have in mind – not a world away from John Wick going undercover in a Chevy Chase National Lampoon flick – fails to hold attention or tickle funnybones after a while. No-one would call Nobody 2 dull, but most would agree it is disposable in the most damning sense of the word. Co-stars Colin Hanks, Connie Nielsen. Originally published as Verdict on Pamela Anderson's big new role in The Naked Gun

Addison Rae lauds 'perfectionist' Lana Del Rey
Addison Rae lauds 'perfectionist' Lana Del Rey

Perth Now

time3 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Addison Rae lauds 'perfectionist' Lana Del Rey

Addison Rae identified with Lana Del Rey's "perfectionist" approach. The Diet Pepsi singer shared the stage with the Video Games hitmaker at London's Wembley Stadium last month and revealed that the pair have exacting standards when it comes to performing. Speaking to Zane Lowe for Apple Music 1, Addison said: "It was so fun. Lana is one of the greatest artists of our generation – honestly, of our lifetime. I think she's just incredible, and so kind and sweet, and so helpful and open. "She's such a perfectionist, which is so inspiring to watch. I'm a perfectionist as well, and she never lets that go away. It's really nice to see someone that is constantly wanting everything to be perfect for everyone to enjoy." Addison had previously hailed Lana, 40, as a "divine woman" after the shows at Wembley. She wrote on Instagram: "I will never forget this. Thank you so much to the most beautiful divine woman, heart, soul, mind…, Lana. I am the happiest and luckiest girl on earth. Being next to you is spiritual. (sic)" Addison – who found fame on the social media platform TikTok – will embark on her debut concert tour later this month and is anticipating a "wild" experience as she takes centre stage at the gigs. The 24-year-old star said: "I've been having a lot of fun. I'm excited. I'm nervous. "It's gonna be so wild. I got a nice little taste of it a few times with doing the Box shows and then obviously I got to open up for Lana, so that was really fun. This is such a different experience because it'll be everyone coming to listen to just my album and a few other songs." The High Fashion singer's debut album Addison was released in June and she was proud that the record had an all-female production team in the form of Elvira Anderfjard and Luka Kloser. Rae told Billboard: "I think the perspective of having a room of only females was just a really different energy than what we're all used to. It doesn't really happen very often. "I didn't expect it to happen this way, and I don't think anybody else expected that from me, which was really nice, because I think it's always good to have people unsure of what you're going to do. "We are all around the same age and have similar life experiences in a lot of ways, being women in this industry."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store