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  1. #1
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    Breaking as an official sport of the 2024 Paris Olympics

    BREAKING



    Breaking is a style of dance that originated in the United States in the 1970s. It took form in the lively block parties in the Bronx, emerging from hip hop culture, and is characterised by acrobatic movements, stylised footwork and the key role played by the DJ and the MC (master of ceremonies) during battles.

    International competitions were first held all over the world in the 1990s, popularising the dance form both among hip hop communities and the general public along the way.


    Bref overview of the rules
    At the Paris 2024 Games, the breaking competition will comprise two events – one for men and one for women – where 16 B-Boys and 16 B-Girls will go face to face in spectacular solo battles. Athletes will use a combination of power moves – including windmills, the 6-step and freezes – as they adapt their moves and improvise to the beat of the DJ’s tracks in a bid to secure the judges’ votes and take home the first Olympic breaking title.

    Olympic history
    Breaking made its Olympic debut at the Youth Olympic Games in Buenos Aires in 2018. Following its outstanding success, breaking has been chosen to feature on the Paris 2024 Olympic sports programme as a new sport, along with surfing, skateboarding and sport climbing.

    Events in 2024
    The breaking events will take place on the 9th and 10th of August.
    B-Girls (women’s)
    B-Boys (men’s)

    Venue in 2024
    La Concorde

    International organisation
    International federation : World Dance Sport Federation
    www.worlddancesport.org/
    Gung-Fu-amp-Breakdancing
    2024-Paris-Olympics
    Gene Ching
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  2. #2
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    Michelle is still fire

    Oscar winner Michelle Yeoh elected to be an International Olympic Committee member

    Oscar-winning actress and UNDP Goodwill Ambassador Michelle Yeoh addresses a media conference on road safety at EU headquarters in Brussels, Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

    Updated 6:41 AM PDT, October 17, 2023
    MUMBAI, India (AP) — Oscar-winning actor Michelle Yeoh was elected as a member of the International Olympic Committee on Tuesday despite some “no” votes from her new colleagues.

    Eight new IOC members were voted in to make a total of 107 drawn from royal families, sports officials, current and former athletes, and leaders from politics and industry.

    After being summoned to the lectern by Princess Nora of Liechtenstein, the longest serving IOC member at 39 years, Yeoh read the 104-word oath while holding a corner of the Olympic flag — white with five colored rings.

    “I promise to fight against all forms of discrimination and dedicate myself in all circumstances to promote the interests of the International Olympic Committee and Olympic Movement,” Yeoh said to complete the oath.

    Like the other new recruits, Yeoh was presented with a golden medallion by IOC president Thomas Bach.

    Member duties at annual IOC meetings include approving recommended candidates as future Olympic hosts. In Paris next year, they could also be asked to change Olympic rules to allow Bach to seek a third term as president in 2025 beyond the current 12-year limit.

    Yeoh, who has ties to the United Nations representing her home country Malaysia, was elected in a 67-9 vote by secret ballot. Her membership comes in the same year as her Oscar win for best actress in “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”

    She also is an international campaigner for road safety in partnership with her husband, Jean Todt, the former head of the Ferrari team in Formula One racing. He also previously served as president of FIA, the governing body of motorsports.

    The only unanimous vote Tuesday was the 76-0 result for Cecilia Tait, a three-time Olympian in volleyball and a former congresswoman from Peru. Tait helped Peru win a silver medal at the 1988 Seoul Olympics.

    The first Israeli to win an Olympic medal, Yael Arad, also was elected Tuesday, 71-5. Now president of the Israeli Olympic committee, she won silver in judo at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.

    Other new members include Hungarian government sports executive Balázs Fürjes, German sports official Michael Mronz and Tunisian lawyer Mehrez Boussayene.

    Two recently elected presidents of governing bodies in Olympic sports also got membership: Petra Sörling of Sweden from table tennis and Kim Jae-youl of South Korea from the International Skating Union.

    IOC members are nominally volunteers but can receive $7,000 each year for administrative costs. They are entitled to receive $450 each day they are at meetings, plus on travel days.
    2024-Olympics
    Michelle-Yeoh
    Gene Ching
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    Snoop Dogg!

    SNOOP DOGG TO JOIN NBCUNIVERSAL’S PRIMETIME COVERAGE OF OLYMPIC GAMES PARIS 2024

    Global Megastar will Provide Regular Reports from Paris for Olympic Primetime Show on NBC and Peacock



    STAMFORD, Conn. – Dec. 31, 2023 – Snoop Dogg is joining NBCUniversal’s coverage of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 this summer. The global megastar will be on site in Paris to provide regular reports for the Olympic Primetime Show beginning July 26, 2024, on NBC and Peacock. The announcement was made tonight during halftime of Sunday Night Football’s coverage of the Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings on NBC and Peacock.

    Throughout the Games, Snoop will speak with NBC Olympics host Mike Tirico and provide the large primetime U.S. audience with his unique take on what’s happening in Paris. He’ll explore the city’s iconic landmarks, attend Olympic competitions and events, and visit with the athletes, their friends, and families.

    “I grew up watching the Olympics and am thrilled to see the incredible athletes bring their A-game to Paris. It’s a celebration of skill, dedication, and the pursuit of greatness,” said Snoop Dogg. “We’re going to have some amazing competitions and, of course, I will be bringing that Snoop style to the mix. It’s going to be the most epic Olympics ever, so stay tuned, and keep it locked. Let’s elevate, celebrate, and make these games unforgettable, smoke the competition, and may the best shine like gold. Peace and Olympic LOVE, ya dig?” 🏅👊🏾

    “Snoop is already an Olympic gold medal commentator, generating tens of millions of views for his highlights commentary on Peacock of the dressage competition during the Tokyo Olympics,” said Molly Solomon, Executive Producer and President, NBC Olympics Production. “That performance alone has earned Snoop a job as our Special Correspondent in Paris. We don’t know what the heck is going to happen every day, but we know he will add his unique perspective to our re-imagined Olympic primetime show.”

    Earlier tonight during halftime of Sunday Night Football, Snoop starred in a “Snoop Year’s Eve” promotional video for the Paris Olympics. In a 75-second version of the spot, Snoop jokes with Team USA athletes Suni Lee (gymnastics), A’ja Wilson (basketball), Jagger Eaton (skateboarder), and duo Kelly Cheng and Sara Hughes (beach volleyball) about their past triumphs and future Olympic dreams. He ends the video by telling Cheng and Hughes that he’ll see them in Paris. The content was shot in November at Universal Studios in Los Angeles as part of NBCUniversal’s state-of-the-art promotional shoot for the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

    In Paris this summer, the world’s greatest athletes will compete against the backdrop of one of the most beautiful cities in the world where the modern Olympic Games were conceived 130 years ago. This will be the third time Paris has hosted the Olympics (1900 and 1924), tying London for the most as a Summer Games host. Los Angeles (1932, 1984) will tie those two cities when it hosts the first Summer Games in the U.S. in 32 years in 2028.

    The organizers of Paris 2024 are reimagining the Games to make them more accessible to the public and to showcase their city to the world. In a first, competitions will be held amidst iconic Parisian landmarks – beach volleyball at the Eiffel Tower, equestrian at the Palace of Versailles, and urban sports at Place de la Concorde.

    In May, NBCU announced that the NBC broadcast network and streaming service Peacock will be the company’s primary platforms for its coverage of the Olympic Games Paris 2024, scheduled for July 26-Aug. 11, 2024. Click here for more programming information and here for information about the Paralympics, which will take place Aug. 28-Sept. 8.

    NBCU owns the U.S. media rights to the Olympic Games through 2032, which are scheduled for Paris (2024), Milan Cortina (2026), Los Angeles (2028) and Brisbane (2032). The host city for the 2030 Olympic Winter Games has not yet been chosen.

    ABOUT SNOOP DOGG

    An Entertainment Industry Mogul, Snoop Dogg has reigned for nearly three decades as an unparalleled force who has raised the bar as a globally recognized innovator. Snoop Dogg is an American rapper, singer, songwriter, actor, record producer, DJ, media personality, businessman and icon. In addition to his extensive work in music, Snoop Dogg is a serial entrepreneur with endeavors in Web 3.0, tech, entertainment, lifestyle, global consumer brands, and food/beverage and cannabis industries.

    ABOUT NBCUNIVERSAL

    NBCUniversal is one of the world’s leading media and entertainment companies in the development, production, and marketing of entertainment, news, sports and information to a global audience. NBCUniversal owns and operates a valuable portfolio of news and entertainment television networks, a premier motion picture company, significant television production operations, a leading television stations group, world-renowned theme parks, and a premium ad-supported streaming service. NBCUniversal is a subsidiary of Comcast Corporation.
    Gotta give Snoop cred for reinventing himself in pop culture in so many ways.
    Gene Ching
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    Aya Nakamura

    Aya Nakamura, the pop superstar at the centre of a Paris Olympic racism storm
    Outrage from the far right over rumours of a performance at the opening ceremony has exposed deep divisions in France
    Angelique Chrisafis in Paris and Anissa Rami
    Sat 16 Mar 2024 01.00 EDT



    She is the most listened-to French singer in the world, whose relentlessly catchy hits about love and betrayal have been streamed 7bn times and who made history last year when she sold out three Paris gigs in 15 minutes.

    But Aya Nakamura, France’s biggest pop superstar who is known for her unique French style influenced by Afrobeats and Caribbean zouk, called out racism and ignorance this week after far-right politicians expressed outrage over the possibility that she could sing at the Paris Olympics.

    The Paris prosecutor opened an investigation on Friday into alleged racist abuse against the singer during the Olympics row. A complaint had been filed by the France-based International League against Racism and Antisemitism.

    Emmanuel Macron is yet to confirm that he wanted Nakamura to headline the Olympic opening ceremony, singing hits by the 1950s cabaret legend Édith Piaf. But complaints by rightwing politicians and TV pundits that Nakamura was somehow not French enough have exposed deep faultlines of racism and class prejudice that threaten to cast a shadow over the Games.

    Rachida Dati, the culture minister, warned against “pure racism”, and Lilian Thuram the former French footballer said: “When people say Aya Nakamura can’t represent France, what criteria do they base it on? I know the criteria, because when I was a footballer, some also said this isn’t the French team because there are too many Blacks.”

    Nakamura, 28, grew up on a housing estate in the northern Paris banlieue suburbs of Seine-Saint-Denis, exactly the communities that the Paris Olympics has promised to showcase and celebrate. Born Aya Danioko in Mali, she arrived in France as a baby. She lived in Aulnay-sous-Bois with her siblings and mother who was a griotte, a traditional Malian poet or singer. She took the stage name Nakamura from the superhero drama Heroes and was talent-spotted after posting songs online aged 19. Her unflinching lyrics on love and relationships, which she writes on her phone, quickly gathered a huge following.


    The Olympic village under construction in the Seine-Saint-Denis suburbs in Paris, where Nakamura grew up. Photograph: Ed Alcock/The Guardian

    French music critics argue that no other female singer in French history – not even Piaf in her postwar stardom – has had Nakamura’s global reach, with fans on every continent, across all classes, backgrounds, ages. Her best-known song, Djajda, has had close to a billion streams on YouTube alone. Her music is resolutely French, influenced by French-Caribbean zouk pop from Guadeloupe and Martinique, mixing in Afropop beats. But while some big French export bands, such as Daft Punk, preferred to sing in English, Nakamura has built a huge global fanbase singing in French.

    When politicians, including the rightwing senate leader, Gérard Larcher, this week attacked Nakamura for poor French because she used slang, other singers shot back that she was part of a long tradition of artists playing on the French language, from the poet Baudelaire to the musician Serge Gainsbourg. The singer Princess Erika said: “These people saying she doesn’t speak French, where do they live? Because Aya speaks not just a poetic French, but the French of young people.” Nakamura told a TV show last year: “There are so many people who speak like me, and there are young people who understand me.”

    Mekolo Biligui, a rap journalist, said: “This row says a lot about what racism is in France. It’s not the first polemic of its kind. When the rapper Youssoupha was chosen by the French football team to record their anthem for the Euro 2021, there was a polemic by the far right. When the rapper Black M was due to perform at the centenary of the battle of Verdun, there was a polemic fed by the right. It’s starting to be a long list. What these performers have in common is they are Black. In France, there is a problem with Black artists. For a long time, France knew how to hide its racism. Here the country can no longer hide it.”

    She said that on TV debates this week, Nakamura, a pop singer, was being wrongly labelled a rapper just because she was Black.

    “My measure of how popular an artist is in France is when they start being played at weddings,” Biligui said. “You hear Nakamura played absolutely everywhere, particularly at weddings because she is so popular, she is the soundtrack to all parts of people’s lives … There is a classist element to criticising her French just because she includes slang. The vivacity of the French language is that it has always contained a lot of slang, from different towns and regions, north and south, and particularly in the melting pot of Paris … This row is trying to reduce Nakamura to the fact she comes from a working-class neighbourhood and is of African heritage. But in fact she’s totally of her time and absolutely part of French culture: she is influenced by zouk, Afro-Caribbean pop music from Martinique and Guadeloupe, which is France. Her music is 100% French.”


    Aya Nakamura on the cover of Vogue. Photograph: Courtesy of Condé Nast

    Christelle Bakima Poundza, is an author and critic whose recent book, Corps Noirs, on Black women in French fashion, examined how Nakamura’s award-winning, bestselling cover of French Vogue in 2021 was a first for a French Black artist. She cautioned that the Vogue cover came relatively late in Nakamura’s career, and she had had far fewer magazine covers in France than other white singers, despite selling millions of records.

    Bakima Poundza, who last year hosted the first gathering of cultural criticism on Nakamura, welcomed a potential Olympics performance and felt the political class had been too slow to stand up for Nakamura against the far right: “She is the first artist who really represents everyone, listened to by all generations – the only artist who could allow France to present an open, diverse, generous and multicultural image. And yet France can’t even defend that image at home.”

    Bakima Poundza saw the row over Nakamura as the latest attack on visible Black women in France, from abuse of the former justice minister Christiane Taubira when she spearheaded the same-sex marriage law in 2013, to the politician Rachel Keke in 2022. She said it added to the sense of a “hostile climate” for French people of colour, after a year in which there was unrest over the police shooting of a 17-year-old boy, Nahel, of Algerian descent, and a hardline immigration bill. She said it sent a message to others: “Don’t exist or represent France, or this is what will happen to you: harassment.”

    It is still uncertain whether Nakamura will perform at the Olympics, but the Paris organising committee is trying to limit the damage from the row. “We are very shocked by the racist attacks against Aya Nakamura,” it said. “Total support to the most listened-to French artist in the world.”
    I'm not familiar with Aya Nakamura. I should tune into her music.
    Gene Ching
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  5. #5
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    300,000 condoms

    Paris 2024 Olympics: Condoms for athletes, but no champagne - organisers hope Games can unite a world in conflict
    In the city of love - with pandemic-era Olympic restrictions over - Paris 2024 is encouraging amour among athletes again. Around 300,000 condoms will be available in the Olympic Village - enough for almost two each for every day of the Games.

    Rob Harris
    Sports correspondent @RobHarris
    Saturday 16 March 2024 05:08, UK

    Olympic chiefs hope a world divided by coronavirus and conflict can be united by cardboard and condoms.

    In the city of love - with pandemic-era Olympic restrictions over - Paris 2024 is encouraging amour among athletes again.

    After the keys were handed over, Sky News joined Games chiefs on inspections of the Olympic Village that will welcome 9,000 athletes in July.

    In the accommodation we were shown the surprising bed frame - cardboard. Sturdy enough, apparently, to support 250kg of Olympian - or Olympians.

    And we were told 300,000 condoms will be available in the Olympic Village - enough for almost two each for every day of the Games.

    Mixing among nations is very much encouraged again with the creation of a Village Club, after social distancing orders at the last summer Games in Tokyo in 2021 and an intimacy ban from the International Olympic Committee.


    A room prepared for athletes inside the Olympic and Paralympic Village
    "It is very important that the conviviality here is something big," Laurent Michaud, director of the village, told Sky News.

    "Working with the athletes commission, we wanted to create some places where the athletes would feel very enthusiastic and comfortable."

    But while a French staple is off the menu in the village there will be plenty to ensure athletes are well-nourished and refreshed.

    "No champagne in the village, of course, but they can have all the champagne they want also in Paris," said Mr Michaud, who previously ran Center Parcs in France.

    "We will have more than 350 metres of buffet with the world food... and I'm sure that the athletes will be very happy to have some French specialties made over here.

    "But the variety will first respond to the athletes' needs for their nutrition and their performance."

    The Olympic Village is the single costliest Olympic project at €2bn (£1.7bn) but largely funded by property investors.

    Around €650m of public funds have also been used for the project that regenerates this deprived area of Saint-Denis near the Stade de France.

    The size of 70 football pitches, the village is split by the River Seine with a bridge to link the accommodation blocks.

    For the IOC it is about avoiding white elephant projects of the past - ensuring host cities are not left with vast infrastructure built for the Olympics that has little lasting legacy.

    "It's about a responsible Games delivering less complex Games, which means less costly Games, and that's very important because we have to be cost conscious in today's world," IOC member Pierre-Olivier Beckers-Vieujant, the Paris 2024 Olympic coordination commission chair, told Sky News.

    "It's a project where 95% of the venues would be either existing or temporary. So in itself, Paris had to build a very limited number of venues and or infrastructure, all of them being needed by the region, like the various infrastructure of the village here."

    There are little signs yet across Paris the Games are coming - the most visible indicators are the additional CCTV cameras being installed.

    Changes to the law were required to allow AI video surveillance to be used to identify potential threats with the security concerns heightened amid the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza and Russia's ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

    But organisers are still determined to take events into the heart of Paris.

    The opening ceremony will be staged down the River Seine with the athletes parading on a flotilla of boats, although the terror threat has curtailed ticket availability from viewing positions.


    How the opening ceremony could look. Pic: Paris 2024

    Pic: Paris 2024
    Urban sports will be at Place de la Concorde at the end of the Champs-Elysees, including the debut of breaking, BMX freestyle and skateboarding.

    And the city's most iconic venue - the Eiffel Tower - will be a stunning setting for beach volleyball.

    Olympic Games executive director Christophe Dubi told Sky News: "This incredible city backdrop comes with the challenge of having this concentration of people over what is in the end a pretty small footprint."

    But it is a welcome challenge after spectators were banned from Tokyo's venues in 2021 due to the pandemic and Rio 2016 struggled to attract large capacities.

    The crowds should be back in force for the first time since London 2012 and the most tickets outside of France have been sold to fans in Britain.

    "It has to be a celebration and it is a celebration - we've had many challenges in the past," Mr Dubi said.

    "In Rio we faced situations that were amazingly complex. But what you see is that with a bit of goodwill from everyone - starting with the organisers, but also as far as the Olympic community is concerned - meeting with the challenges and coming up with solutions... is in the greater interest that the Games represent.

    "What we all want is for unity, peace and a celebration of the best athletes. This is how this creative family works together.

    "Any challenge? We will win."
    330K condoms? Yeah, the city of LOVE
    Gene Ching
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  6. #6
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    Imax

    NBCU Extends Olympics Opening Ceremony Coverage to IMAX Screens
    The organizers will host a 4-mile flotilla along the River Seine July 26


    For the opening ceremony of the 2024 Summer Olympic Games in Paris, organizers plan a flotilla of athletes along the River Seine.NBCUniversal

    By Stephen Lepitak
    MARCH 25, 2024

    NBCUniversal plans to extend live coverage of the 2024 Paris Olympics opening ceremony across over 150 IMAX screens.
    On July 26, the organizers are planning a four-mile-long flotilla of almost 100 boats along the River Seine, carrying all of the athletes from over 200 countries. NBCU stated that this is the first time the Summer Olympic Games opening ceremony has not been held in a stadium.
    NBC’s coverage of the opening ceremony will be hosted by singer and presenter Kelly Clarkson, Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback and two-time Super Bowl champion Peyton Manning and NBC Olympics primetime host Mike Tirico.
    “We look forward to providing our opening ceremony coverage to audiences at IMAX locations across the country, sharing in this historic moment as the world regathers to witness the spectacular beginning of 16 days of athletic greatness against the backdrop of one of the most beautiful cities in the world,” said Gary Zenkel, president of NBC Olympics, in a statement.
    A trailer promoting its coverage will begin running in IMAX theaters nationwide March 29.
    Worldwide partners for this year’s games include Airbnb, Alibaba, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Coca-Cola, Deloitte, Omega, Panasonic, Procter & Gamble, Samsung and Visa.
    Peacock will act as the broadcaster’s primary platform covering Olympic Games Paris 2024, running from July 26 through Aug. 11, followed by the Paralympic Games, which will take place Aug. 28 through Sept. 8.
    NBCUniversal owns the U.S. media rights to the Olympic Games until 2032. It recently unveiled ways to bolster ad sales around the event, including through generative artificial intelligence, shoppable food delivery and, for the first time, a new programmatic offering.
    Spectators in Paris will be able to cheer on the flotilla from the banks of the Seine. It will finish in front of the Trocadéro, where the closing stages of the ceremony will take place.


    STEPHEN LEPITAK
    @stephenlepitak
    stephen.lepitak@adweek.com
    Stephen is Adweek's Europe bureau chief based in Glasgow.
    4 mile flotilla on IMAX might be with the watch...
    Gene Ching
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  7. #7
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    Hoo haa

    ‘My hoo haa is gonna be out’: Nike’s US Olympic outfits need ‘constant pube vigilance’ say frustrated athletes

    Michelle Del Rey
    Mon, 15 April 2024, 3:17 am GMT-7·2-min read

    Track and field stars are calling out Nike’s ultra-revealing athletic attire after the brand revealed its designs for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

    “Wait, my hoo haa is gonna be out,” wrote Tara Davis-Woodhall, a long jump athlete who participated in the 2020 Olympics, on social media.

    Queen Claye, an American hurdler who competed in the 2008 Olympics also chimed in.

    “Hi @europeanwaxcenter would you like to sponsor Team USA for the upcoming Olympic Games?! Please and thanks”.


    Sha’ Carri Richardson models Nike’s US Olympic track and field attire. (Nike)
    The heavily-critiqued design features a thin high-rise brazilian cut panty line that competitors say wasn’t created with performance in mind. The designs were revealed in Paris on Thursday and modeled by Athing Mu, a middle-distance runner and Sha’Carri Richardson, a sprinter.

    Lauren Fleshman, a national champion runner in 2006 and 2010, did not hold back when speaking about the outfit on social media.

    “I’m sorry, but show me one WNBA or NWSL team who would enthusiastically support this kit”, she wrote on Instagram.

    “This is for Olympic Track and Field. Professional athletes should be able to compete without dedicating brain space to constant pube vigilance or the mental gymnastics of having every vulnerable piece of your body on display.

    “If this outfit was truly beneficial to physical performance, men would wear it. This is not an elite athletic kit for track and field. This is a costume born of patriarchal forces that are no longer welcome or needed to get eyes on women’s sports.

    “I’m queer and I’m attracted to female bodies but I don’t expect or enjoy seeing female athletes or male athletes put in a position to battle self-consciousness at their place of work. This is not part of the job description.”

    In a statement to The Guardian, a spokesperson for the USA track and field team said, “Athlete options and choices were the driving force for USATF in the planning process with Nike”. Nike told Reuters that it would have tailors available for the team this year.

    Additionally, athletes will have unitard options with briefs and shorts. The line of outfits includes 50 apparel pieces and 12 competition styles.

    Some countries are opting for more conservative choices as the debate about revealing sports outfits heats up. In New Zealand, gymnastics athletes can now wear shorts or leggings over their leotards. At the Tokyo Olympics, Germany’s women’s gymnastics team wore full-length bodysuits.
    It's all about constant pube vigilance, amirite?
    Gene Ching
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