Read the Oct Issue #59 of Athleisure Mag and see 9PLAYLIST | LeBron James in mag.
9PLAYLIST | LEBRON JAMES
Read the Oct Issue #59 of Athleisure Mag and see 9PLAYLIST | LeBron James in mag.
Read the Oct Issue #59 of Athleisure Mag and see 9PLAYLIST | LeBron James in mag.
We're excited that we're in the midst of the playoffs for the NBA season, whether your team is playing or you're just happy to have basketball back on TV! Even though we're socially distancing, it's a way for us to feel like we're together. We caught up with Miami Heat, Chicago Bulls and Cleveland Cavaliers veteran, 3 X NBA Champion Dwyane Wade who is also commentating the games for TNT in 'Inside the NBA'. In addition to number of projects that he is working on, Dwyane is the Co-Founder of Budweiser Zero which is a non-alcohol alternative to enjoying a beer solo, with friends or after a great workout.
ATHLEISURE MAG: Prior to the launch of Budweiser Zero, tell us about your initial work with Budweiser and your synergy with the brand?
DWYANE WADE: I started working with Budweiser a little over a year ago when they did the “This Buds For 3” film for my retirement. Most recently, I was part of the Whassup reboot that came out a few months ago with DJ D-Nice, Chris Bosh, Candace Parker and my wife, Gabrielle Union, focusing on checking in on your friends when COVID first hit. I’ve always respected what Budweiser has built and their continued work with athletes. Entering the non-alcoholic market has always been of interest to me and this project seemed like a natural progression of my relationship with Budweiser.
AM: There has been a rise in the beverage industry for zero alcohol beers. Why is this important for those that are athletes or are focused on their fitness endeavors to have this as an option for their celebratory moments?
DW: The non-alcohol category of beer is rapidly growing and with Budweiser Zero, we are able to bring some familiarity into the category. Budweiser’s brewing heritage alone helps redefine pre-existing expectations and associations with non-alcoholic options.
Oftentimes, people feel like they are giving something up with a non-alcoholic option, but we are trying to change that perception and create more opportunities to celebrate life’s moments, both big and small. A focus for me when helping to develop the product was thinking about the athlete’s experiences during the season. Being in the game for so long, I can understand the need for a drink option that lets a player stay on their game but still enjoy social moments and celebrations.
AM: You are the Co-Founder of Budweiser Zero, what drew you to being involved in this and to take on such a role with the brand?
DW: It’s important for me to work with brands who have similar values and priorities that I want to accomplish. When I sat down with Budweiser to start talking about what Budweiser Zero would become, the synergy was there and felt like a great use for my platform, post-basketball.
AM: What can we expect to see for roll out of this launch and how will you be involved?
DW: Budweiser Zero started rolling out in the US in March, but officially launched at the end of July, and will soon be available in Canada and the UK. Budweiser Zero will play a huge role in the sports world, for both athletes and fans. Athletes who are in training or in season, but still want that classic, refreshing beer flavor without compromising their game now have that option. Once fans are able to return to stadiums, Budweiser Zero will become the beer of the ninth inning and fourth quarter. While alcoholic beverages can’t be served at this time, fans can continue to enjoy Budweiser Zero till the last moment of the game. Beyond athletes, I think this product will resonate with consumers looking to cut back on sugar or alcohol and those looking to participate in social occasions without feeling the effects the next morning.
Budweiser and I worked together on this from the start to bring Budweiser Zero to life and I’ll also be sharing the beverage with my friends currently playing in The Bubble.
AM: Tell us about Budweiser Zero as well as elements that you had a direct impact on in terms of bringing the product to market.
DW: Budweiser Zero is Budweiser’s first zero-alcohol product with zero-sugar and only 50 calories. Budweiser Zero is light and crisp and has the same refreshing full-flavored taste people know from Budweiser. I worked with Budweiser from the inception of the idea and helped design the attributes and packaging of the product.
IG @DwyaneWade
PHOTO COURTESY | Budweiser Zero
Read the Aug Issue of Athleisure Mag #56 and read Zeroing in with Dwyane Wade in mag.
On today's episode of #TRIBEGOALS, we had the honor of having 3 X Team USA Olympic Swimming Gold Medalist, Ryan Murphy as Athleisure Mag's 55th cover. Known as a decorated backstroke swimmer who also has a world record in the men's 100-meter backstroke, we talk with Ryan about how he got into the sport, transitioning his interest to going pro, his experiences at the 2016 Summer Games in Rio as well as being part of that riveting 4 x 100m medley. As Ryan looks forward to the Olympics in Tokyo that's slated for next year, we talk about how he trains and modifies his routines as we all navigate COVID-19, the importance of mental health and how he is approaching his goals. He also shares how he is focused on impacting the sport of swimming whether as a competitor or simply enjoying water activities. He also talks about how he gives back to others and how this changemaker has been inspired by others.
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
Read the July Issue of Athleisure Mag #55 and see 9LIST STORI3S | Amanda Anisimova in mag.
On today's episode of #TRIBEGOALS, we catch up with 4 X NBA Champion, John Salley. Avid listeners know that we spoke with him last season on this podcast show and always enjoy when we have the chance to get his thoughts. He talks about gifting for dads and grads, his appearance and commentary on ESPN's The Last Dance and words of advice as we navigate what is going on at this time.
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
This month’s cover and back cover is 3 X Team USA Swimming Gold Medalist, Ryan Murphy. Our cover shoot editorial – Always Topping with Ryan Murphy, talks about Ryan’s career, how he got into swimming and his love of the backstroke, his success in the Summer Games in Rio in 2016, his approach to the upcoming games, how he is furthering the sport of swimming as well as encouraging others to embrace water sports. This interview will also be in an upcoming #TRIBEGOALS podcast episode. We also have an interview with Celebrity Fitness Trainer Harley Pasternak as we talk about working out from home, how he advises his clients in terms of what they needed on hand, his thoughts on gym and studio openings, a correlation between sugar and COVID-19 and how he has been passing his time for the past few months. We check in with Team Canada Pole Vaulter Ashlyn Newman who recently participated in The World’s Greatest in Greenville, South Carolina, this year’s first USA sanctioned Track & Field event. She talks about how she got into the sport, her training focus and what she looks forward to for the upcoming Olympic Games. Her interview will also be on an upcoming podcast of Bungalow SK. We check in with one of the Co-Founders of Huda Beauty, Mona Kattan. She talks about her role with the brand, their product assortment, KAYALI fragrance which is a part of this beauty empire, the power of fragrance and how she is spending her time in Dubai. We also talk to Head Winemaker of Cupcake Vineyard, Jessica Tomei. She talks about how she got into her career, harvest season, their newest line Cupcake Light Hearted and the importance of keeping it delicious. This episode will also be an upcoming podcast episode of Bungalow SK. In this month’s The Art of the Snack, we talk with James Beard Award winner, Food & Wine winner and runner up on BRAVO’s Top Chef Season 11 and Fan Favorite, Nina Compton. She talks about her culinary journey, her two restaurants, how she has navigated COVID-19 and signature dishes and cocktails that can be enjoyed there.
Read the July Issue #55 of Athleisure Mag here.
2020 has been a strange year so far. It has definitely altered our day to day while also making us grateful for the little things that have taken place. COVID-19 arrived right before the Spring. As the weeks went by in the month of March, a number of sport leagues began to announce the cancellation of their season or an indefinite postponement. As the weeks continued into months, we realized that in addition to sports, the complete seasons of our favorite shows were effected (as well as the upcoming fall season), we got used to seeing a number of shows that have included a number of elements of Zoom integration and more.
As we navigated these months, we hard rumblings of leagues talking about finishing or even starting their seasons in a truncated format. While we waited for the official answer on that, we were glad to enjoy programs such as ESPN’s The Last Dance, 30 For 30 and more. As Nascar began its season, golf began heading to the links and decisions were made about the NBA - baseball began its discussions. After a period of “will they or won’t they”, July 24th marked Opening Day with the New York Yankees playing World Series 2019 Champions, Washington Nationals. The Yankees traveled to Washington, DC. Dr. Anthony Fauci threw out the first pitch and in a stadium that had no attendees and sounds pumped in during the game, fans across the US settled in to watch the game.
Both teams paid respect to the Black Lives Matter movement as well as having a MLB x BLM logo on the pitchers mound that was seen throughout the game. Throughout the game, viewers saw players wearing masks at various times and getting into their groove as we were treated to one of our favorite pastimes. The commentators talked about the game as well as sharing anecdotes. With so many months of live games being a distant memory, even an altered version of the game is better than not having it!
Due to inclement weather, the game was delayed and ultimately the Yankees were declared the winner. The two teams will play again on July 26th at Yankee Stadium as well as on July 27th. Fans of the game were treated to a doubleheader with the LA Dodgers versus the San Francisco Giants.
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
This month, we caught up with retired NBA Champion Matt Barnes who played 14 seasons in the league. His ability to bring his energy and focus to the court was seen on a number of teams from the LA Lakers, Golden State Warriors and the Sacramento Kings just to name a few. His unapologetic honesty and loyalty to himself as well as who he works with shined through on the court and continues to be seen through his philanthropy, his skincare brand HUE For Every Man, the cannabis industry, as well as his focus on social justice. With the confluence of COVID-19 and the movement of #BlackLivesMatter, he continues to be at the forefront of ensuring that voices are heard and that people understand the importance of voting at the local, state and national level for changes to be made. He has lent his voice to rally's in his hometown of Sacramento for George Floyd as well as Stephon Clark. We talk about this as well as his successful podcast All the Smoke on SHOWTIME, his enterprises and the upcoming NBA season and playoffs and the importance of sports as we navigate challenging times.
ATHLEISURE MAG: We just wanted to kick it off that we’re excited to be talking with you about your basketball career, your skincare brand as well as the current state of things that are taking place right now. We’ve always enjoyed seeing you and have been following your career since you got into the league and how unapoligetically authentic that you are as a team player and someone that plays hard and how you use your platform to benefit others and to just bring awareness to the forefront.
MATT BARNES: I appreciate that very much. I try and I enjoy it so thank you.
AM: Of course! When did you fall in love with the game of basketball and what was the moment that you realized that you wanted to play in the NBA?
MB: I’d probably say that I fell in love with the game of basketball – hmm. I actually grew up as a football fan. Football was the sport that I was better in and naturally more gifted in. But I continued to grow so basketball, I kind of picked it up and started taking it more seriously probably around 7th grade. That’s when I started really playing a lot more. But back then, we just played, it wasn’t so much working out. It was just another sport that I took seriously. It kind of took me to being lucky enough to make it to the NBA.
AM: You played on a number of teams with amazing athletes. What do you feel your legacy is in terms of the sport?
MB: Just a real guy that was a great teammate. I played as absolutely hard as I could and I never took a play off, never took a game off and I left it all on the court.
AM: In your opinion, when a player is going on in their career, what is the process like when you realize that you’re going to retire and that you’re about to transition to that next phase of life and did you find that hard?
MB: My retirement was kind of subtle. I had just signed a new contract for 3 years at the beginning of the season. I had actually just retired and it was actually just a perfect storm of winning a championship although it didn’t really pan out the way that I had planned it but, winning a championship and missing my kids – I mean, I was going through a divorce at the time when I wasn’t able to see my twin sons as much as I wanted to. I figured that I had gotten 14 years in the NBA and I wasn’t supposed to be there. I figured it was time to transition and to see what was next. I was actually excited about my transition so I ended up retiring at 37.
But I started to think about business and what was next. I mean, the average NBA career is only 3 years and I beat that. At about year 8 or 9 when I was in the NBA, I started thinking about what’s next. So I started investing in things that I kind of enjoyed, that I liked, that I could use and that I could promote. Most people think that kind of stuff happens fast – they don’t realize how long the process is until if the company actually makes it and until you start making some real money off of it. A few business decisions that I had made 4 or 5 years prior with me being in my final season when I had made the championship started coming into fruition and showing a little bit of money, so that’s when I said that now was the time to retire. My transition has been smooth for me, luckily. I’ve been able to transition into media, then social justice and all the things that I am passionate about along with first and foremost, being a single father of 3 kids. I coach my kids, and I am a very hands on dad with my 18 month old son, so retirement has been amazing and I feel like, I’m going to be able to have an impact on the world post-career than during my playing career.
AM: We love seeing you as an analyst on ESPN for The Jump (we recently had Rachel Nichols as our cover for issue #51 earlier this year) and Get Up. What do you like about sports broadcasting?
MB: What I like to do and why I got into the space, is to give them the other side from a players point of view. From what we’re thinking with 2 mins to go in the fourth quarter of a big game or overtime of a big game. How we deal with injuries or how we deal with family and travel. Like, you can be a great reporter, but would never be able to give that kind of insight or detail because you’ve never played. I think as a player, it’s our duty to give the raw and real integral details of what makes our job so unique and so special. I see these days that so often so many people that have never played the sport, want to disrespect people and talk crazy about people and kind of don’t appreciate how hard it is for us to be in that position in the first place. You know what I mean – to be a professional that’s like 1%. You have a better chance of being struck by lightening than being in the NBA. To give a clear cut understanding of what it’s like to walk in those shoes and then to be able to also talk about it for the first time – well not for the first time, it’s slowly but surely becoming more popular to have African American men that are able to get our point across. They don’t have to tell our stories anymore. You know, there are so many guys that have their platforms now that have a voice and they can tell our own stories now and sports is just part of it.
AM: What led you to being a part of HUE For Every Man which is a natural, multi-cultural brand. What stars aligned to do this and why was it so important that you wanted to be attached to this?
MB: I was always known during my career for having the best haircuts and cleanest hairline.
AM: This is true.
MB: I mean my hair, when I was approached by HUE and I found out first and foremost that it was a great product line, but then Jessica Estrada (CEO of HUE For Every Man), she has been amazing. She pours her heart and soul into this company. She’s a blue collar worker and that’s what I was in the NBA, so part of me really wanted to help her to fulfill her dream and to get this off the ground. I wanted to see what we could really do with it. On the multi-cultural side, I’m Italian and Black. Now more than ever, we’ve been divided and so many things are targeted for either a white audience or a Black audience. There’s no real in between and there are a lot of people who are in between these days. There are a lot of biracial people out there. So really, the message for every man is that at the end of the day, we’re all men, we’re all human and it kind of speaks to more of an understanding of what this country needs right now.
AM: What are your 3 must haves that are go to products within HUE For Every Man?
MB: I use the pomade but my favorite product is the awakening mist. Because, I’m a cannabis user and I smoke throughout the day and the awakening mist is always something that refreshes me. Obviously, it helps my skin and I really enjoy it and I give it to all my friends and they really appreciate it so those are my 2 favorites along with the shampoo and the conditioner. The conditioner has a really special smell to it that I really like. Most people, when you get a celebrity or an athlete, they attach their name to it and it may not even be a product that they use everyday. I’m such a person that has always been real and true and I speak my truth. This is something that I really believe in and something that I really use and I want to make it work.
AM: Are there new products that are about to launch that you can tell us about?
MB: I’m also going to get into the CBD skincare line. I’m an advocate of cannabis and realizing how amazing CBD is and educating people on the plant as a whole, I thought that this would be the perfect opportunity to jump into the space. I’ve been told that I have nice skin, so it just made sense and I also realized that there are not too many people in this space that talk to my demographic. Skincare is something that we care about, but it’s not really spoken on. So if I make it with the movement to make it cool to care about what your appearance is as many people think of it as something that only women do. Men care just as much about their appearance as women do. So, if we can do something for lines and get people on a cleansing routine, moisturizing and realizing how important moisturizing is for your skin. It’s on a personal level, but it’s also on an educating level. We need to let guys know that this is the only face that we have. You have to take care of your skin and your appearance.
AM: We recently started listening to your podcast All the Smoke with you and Stephen Jackson, it’s such a clever show. How did you come about creating the concept, the two of you deciding to work together and what’s your process like in terms of booking the people that come on your show?
MB: We were former teammates and he’s one of my closest friends. We were both respectfully working with ESPN and FOX Sports. We would always get people on social media asking if we would do something together, but we were working for our networks. One day I said that we had to do something together. With me being with ESPN/Disney and FOX – we need to kind of walk the line, but I know that the podcast – even though I didn’t really know what it was, I knew that people felt it would really speak to them. He and I would be good at. We tried it and SHOWTIME took a chance on us not really knowing what we were capable of and we struck gold! We wanted to come in as a sports podcast because obviously, that’s what we’re known as. We also wanted to shift more towards culture as a whole.
We wanted to humanize our guests and let them know the other side of their favorite celebrity, athlete, musician or whoever it may be. Everyone already knows what we’re known for. I play basketball, I rap or I play football – you know that, but what are they really like off of the court? What are they in to, what are their day to day lives like – so humanizing people was something that I wanted to do. Through our long careers, we’ve been able to make a lot of friends and connections. The majority of our guests – all of them, we have booked them ourselves based off of personal relationships as well as our ability to being real. A lot of our guests will somewhat let their walls down and really freely and comfortably speak to us. It’s worked.
AM: Well 2020 has been an interesting year between us quarantining with COVID-19, #BlackLivesMatter, tackling social justice issues and the 2020 election that is around the corner. In looking at your Instagram, you’re out there on the forefront. How important is it for you to use your platform, to push for changes and to get other people to raise awareness regardless of people’s skin tones to ensure that this movement keeps progressing?
MB: I think it’s important. I experienced a lot of racism growing up and it culminated in high school where my school was vandalized and the building was nearly burnt by the KKK. I faced racism growing up and I have always been really sensitive to the subject. Just to see the current state of America, we have never been more divided. Things have continued to happen and it’s almost normalized to where you think that this is normal – Black people being killed now. It’s unfortunate but it has been happening so much. I think what happened with George Floyd obviously boiled not only our country but the whole world to say that we have had enough. We’re upon a big change and as someone who has always been vocal, I am speaking on different matters and this is just something that I am very passionate about. I feel like that this is the first time in over 400 years that the world hears us and particularly the United States. So now, we have to have a plan and me using my platform, showing people what I am doing and trying to educate people. I think that we have to have a plan of intelligence. Now that they are listening, we have to know what we want and the only way to get what we want is to vote. It’s not just about voting for the president, it’s about your local level. People don’t know that most laws are made and passed on the local and the state level. Just continuing to educate people, trying to do my part and getting my friends to help and really understand the power of our community and when we come together that we can change the world.
AM: Being able to see how people have come together and to know that we have to follow through to continue to make our voices heard by making our votes is essential. In addition to this taking place, with the absence of sports, I’m sure you like the rest of us were riveted to ESPN’s The Last Dance as we get ready for the NBA basketball season to resume. What do you think about the format that will take place to complete the season and to head to the playoffs?
MB: I think it was great you know? Normally, when the world is having a crisis, sports is something that we can always turn to. It’s been a hell of 2020 like you mentioned, and 2020 took away sports. So for the NBA to be coming back, it’s slowly but surely becoming America’s past time. I love that they were able to come to some sort of solution or understanding to get back on the court and to really help start the world to heal. We obviously have so far to go, but sports has always been that one time that people can come together. I think that now, more than ever, that’s what we really need. I’m every excited about it and it wouldn’t seem right if we didn’t have a champion this year and now we’re going to be able to get a chance to get that.
AM: We couldn’t agree more. We’re sure that you have a number of projects going on, whether you’re talking about in front of the camera or behind it, are there things that we should be looking forward to in order to keep our eye out for it?
MB: Obviously, you can catch All the Smoke on SHOWTIME right now although we’re in negotiations for a new deal so hopefully, that happens! Also, I’m continuing to produce and create content that I’ll start really getting out there on different networks and platforms as it’s taken over my love of sports – just being able to create content and being able to share true stories, real stories and do inspirational stories. I’m starting to that and I just signed with ICM to help me build my goal and that will be cool. I’m doing a lot in the cannabis space right now trying to educate people on that. Continue to follow that. Last but not least, educating people in a fun way on politics and teaching them on how meaningful it is. Not so much about not being passionate overall in voting for the president or whatever, but finding causes that you’re passionate about and building on those. That’s a small step to getting people first and foremost to register, getting them interested and hopefully getting them all the way interested in being able to understand how powerful their voices are to this country.
AM: We always like to end our interviews asking our changemakers who you clearly are – who are you inspired by. Who are three people who have inspired you to be at the point that you are at now?
MB: Nipsey Hussle RIP. Kobe RIP. These guys because of their focus and dedication on their craft and their obsessive nature – like their beautiful mind to be great. I think that both of those guys were great in their own way and they would have only become greater before their lives were cut short. Someone else that I look up to which is a big thing – I look up to someone like Michael Strahan. Someone who is able to be a formal athlete, able to speak on sports, crossover to mainstream media as well which is something that I would like to do.
PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS | PG 16 - 25 Matt Barnes + Editorial Design by Athleisure Mag | PG 27 + 33 Ray Chavez | PG 28 - 31 SHOWTIME |
Read the June Issue #54 of Athleisure Mag and see Authentically Matt Barnes in mag.
We enjoyed talking with 4 X NBA Champion, John Salley, last year and always enjoy when we have the chance to catch up with him again. This month, we talk about gifting for dads and grads, his appearance and commentary on ESPN's The Last Dance and words of advice as we navigate what is going on at this time.
ATHLEISURE MAG: We always love being able to chat with you and love our annual Father’s Day chats while also getting your thoughts on what’s taking place at the moment!
JOHN SALLEY: I love speaking with you and thank you for having me! Hopefully I will speak with you next Father’s Day as well.
AM: It’s a date.
JS: It’s a date ha!
AM: It has been quite a year to say the least, but thankfully, we’re still celebrating and with Father’s Day coming up, what’s on your list this year?
JS: Oh my God do I have some things for you! This is the deal. I have Old Spice, they are coming out first to market with their beard conditioning set! Now you hear a lot from Old Spice talking about how it smells on you, but this – I have been sporting a beard for the last 2.5 years and I have the beard wash, beard conditioner, beard balm and I really love the beard oil as it sits around and it nourishes my beard and gives that glisten. It doesn’t look scruffy, it looks well kept and it looks organized. I love that so I’m going to tell you to get the Old Spice Beard Kit and it’s graduation season. Boys now in high school that have beards – this is going to be a big one for them too. It's not just for the dads but graduating guys as well.
I also have something else with an app that I use and get he family to use, it’s called Slickdeals. They have 12M users on the app and on the site. They vet and vote for different deals so any given time, a new deal will pop up but you know that you’re going to get a really good deal – the best of the best of the deals. They came up with a thing called the Front Page. This way, you can shop with confidence and know that you’re getting the best price. You don’t want to have to buy something and go somewhere else and see it for a less price, it makes you feel bad. You don’t run through that with slick deals. You can also take the knowledge of the community of Slickdeals and through an extension browser on Chrome and Edge, when you shop online as soon as you put the product into the cart, the code goes with it and you don’t have to look around for savings. It pops right in and it’s going to be the best deal that you can possibly get. When you go to checkout with your merchant, all of a sudden, all of the codes are in the place and you will see all of the savings. The best thing about this especially for Father’s Day is the editors over at Slickdeals have curated an unbelievable Father’s Day section so you can go in there to get tips and ideas and the best deals possible.
AM: These are definitely good things to know about especially with the quarantine going on, there are a lot of people sporting those beards!
JS: Oh I know – there is a lot of hair out there and I know! Here in California a lot of barbers and hair salons are still not open.
AM: We have been dying for our sports fix and we were so excited to see you on ESPN’s The Last Dance. How was that to be on the documentary and to provide all your insights into this show that captured everybody?
JS: It was unbelievable. I know that when they told me about it, after I did the interview they said to forget I did the interview because we weren’t allowed to talk about it. When I saw it, I was like, “wow that was a whole year ago.” I think that it was definitely needed during the pandemic because there is nothing on television to watch except for more and more of fear. Just seeing how much my friend Michael Jordan had to go through, I had no idea that he had to go through that much trauma. Having to deal with being a Bull going up against the Detroit Pistons! So I got to see the inside workings of the Chicago Bulls which we had no knowledge of. I think that if we had known that, we would have seen that as a weakness definitely. I think that they did a good job of that!
AM: With the NBA resuming the season partially as well as having the playoffs, are you excited and how do you feel about the format? Who are you cheering on?
JS: I live in Los Angelos now so I’m a LeBron – well I have always been a LeBron fan – never a Cleveland Cavalier fan. So having him wearing the purple and gold, being an established 3 X World Champion – I think it’s really important that he wins Championships here and continue the legacy. With the focus, he has had time off to – no one has had the time to grieve over the passing of Kobe, but we had time off to deal with it and time off for athletes to deal with nagging injuries of their bodies, to rest their bodies – this is the first time that this has ever happened. To be able to rest your body and not have to worry about getting traded. I think that coming back, I’m really going to be watching the Lakers to win a Championship this year!
AM: Same.
We’re huge fans of the Lakers. One of the things that we love about you is that you are such a positive person. Right now, there are so many things going on from the quarantine, protests for #BlackLivesMatter – what is a positive mantra that you are using to continue going forward that we can use in our day to day?
JS: Well I have a lot of friends talking to me – Caucasian friends asking what they can do and asking me if I see it my way and I say, this is the one time to be quiet. Don’t deal out of ego, don’t deal out of entitlement of any sort – literally listen, pay attention to each thing you say and feel. You don’t have to walk on eggshells, but check yourself to find out if you are in the right spot on this world and in the right spot in this life which is what you have to do. I say this all the time. Meditate, breathe, pray and enjoy the life that you have.
IG @JohnSalley
PHOTOGRAPHY | John Salley
Hear retired 4 X NBA Champion, philanthropist, entrepreneur, vegan and activist, John Salley on our show, #TRIBEGOALS - which is a part of Athleisure Studio, our multi-media podcast network! Make sure to subscribe to find out when the episode drops. You can hear it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, iHeart Radio, Google Podcasts and wherever you enjoy listening to your favorite podcast.
Read the June Issue #54 of Athleisure Mag and see Something You Should Know with John Salley in mag.
As we all begin to see a number of our favorite sports come back, there is another one that we should mark our calendars for as we wait for our favorite summer sports at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games during the rescheduled event for next year in Tokyo. World’s Greatest Live, presented by Zenni Optical (exclusive partner that will outfit all 10 competitors with sunglasses to promote eye health with its signature Blokz line for blue light-blocking) brings the top women’s pole vaulters together. You can watch the events take place on July 16th at 6pm EST on YouTube.com/ESPN.
With ESPN, Zenni and World’s Greatest broadcasting the USA Track & Field sanctioned event where the women will compete in pole vaulting. Team USA’s USA Track & Field’s Silver Medalist Sandi Morris, is hosting the event in Greenville, SC where she created a custom runway approved for world-class events where the competition will be held. The world’s top 10 vaulters will come together for the first American sporting event to have fans back in attendance with strict safety measures that will be implemented. With 150 social distanced spectators, making it one of the first events to have fans back in attendance. All fans will be required to wear masks and temperature checked on site before being spaced in groups 12-feet apart. Each competitor will have an individual landing pad and will be spread far apart while waiting to jump in order to prevent any contact.
You can follow along on Instagram and Twitter to see what’s taking place as the event will be on July 15th and is being taped for live and will be available on July 16th at 6pm EST.
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
Back in 2016, we interviewed 2 X Team USA Beach Volleyball Olympic Medalist April Ross after her Bronze win at the Olympic Games in Rio. Flash forward to this month's cover, we caught up with April Ross to talk about indoor vs beach volleyball, the AVP Tour and the upcoming Olympic Games in Tokyo that are slated to take place next year. We also talk about April joining the KT Tape team and how she uses her social platform to inspire and motivate her followers to stay motivated in their health and fitness journey.
ATHLEISURE MAG: When was the moment that you realized that you wanted to transition from an indoor volleyball player to a beach volleyball player?
APRIL ROSS: There was no specific moment, it was kind of a process and I had kind of given up indoor and just fell out of love with it. My big thing is that I just want to be able to enjoy my journey always. I just wasn’t enjoying my indoor journey. My teammate from USC was playing on the beach and asked me to play in some qualifying events on the beach with her to just help her out. I went out there and we didn’t do very well and I wasn’t very good, but I just fell in love with the sport of beach volleyball. I stuck with it and played it for a while, struggled for a while and I finally broke through and started to have some success and then you know, I just kept riding that wave.
AM: In your opinion, what is the biggest difference between indoor vs. beach volleyball?
AR: There are two biggest differences for me – obviously the surface, it is so ridiculously hard to move and jump in the sand – that just creates a totally different challenge in beach volleyball than when you are playing indoor volleyball. The other big difference is that you touch the ball every single play. You are involved in every single play. You can go through an entire rally during indoor and not touch the ball once. On the sand, when you want a point, you have to touch the ball. I feel like there is a lot more accountability on each player in beach.
AM: Last summer, we attended the AVP NYC Open which was a lot of fun. Obviously, you and Alix Klineman won and typically, right now you would be in the thick of the AVP schedule. How have you been spending your time since you’re not doing that at the moment?
AR: Life looks a little different right now. I’m at home pretty much all day. I’m working on some home improvement stuff that I have never had time for. That’s actually really nice. I checked out a big amount of gym equipment from the USA Volleyball Gym and I cleaned out my garage which has been full of storage stuff for the last 10 years. I created a home gym and I am able to get my full lift in there which is about 2 and a half hours. I’m going to Home Depot today to get supplies to make a wooden squat rack. Because I do a little bit of woodworking too and I am getting back into the hobby now that I have some time to explore that so I thought putting my time into making a wooden squat rack would be great. I looked at some designs online that I want to try. Working out, visioning, I’m doing a lot reading and a lot of reflectioning as well as journaling. I’ve been doing a lot of Zoom calls. I mean, everyone is doing the Zoom calls.
AM: For sure. Obviously, with the Olympics being pushed back to next year, what does this next period look like for you especially in regards to training and getting prepared for that?
AR: That’s a constant discussion with my team. We’re trying to grasp onto something in the near future that we can train for and that’s proving hard to do obviously. So, we’re kind of waiting and seeing the government guidelines are when we can get back out on the beach. We want to take advantage of this time, but it’s really hard if we can’t get out on the sand. We can do so much off of the sand, but you have to be able to practice. We’re trying to see how we can have a training camp and if we can do it safely if there is a private court somewhere and we take the proper precautions, maybe in June at some point we can get on the sand and do 3 – 4 weeks of training camp. If there is still nothing on the schedule, maybe we can take a week off. I mean, it’s tough. I’ve never ever had to do anything like this.
AM: It’s a day-by-day thing.
AR: Right, it’s literally a day-by-day thing. It’s a constant brainstorm and getting creative and with each new piece of information, it changes so we’re trying to be really go with the flow!
AM: The weekend of May 22nd, I love that you have partnered with KT Tape to do an Instagram Live event where we can train like an Olympian, actually work out with you and get off of our butts to get a good workout in. Why is this so important for you to participate in this?
AR: I’m really excited for this KT Tape Instagram Live workout. Because I’m not playing and I can’t really interact with fans to encourage and motivate people through my competitions and stuff, I love doing this and engaging people and helping them while they’re at home. Maybe I am creating a little bit motivation or making it a little bit easier for people to have access and information on how to work out and to stay healthy during this time – as well as how to do it while you’re staying at home. I feel like I’m still of service in some way and I just really like to have some kind of positive influence on whoever decides to follow me on social media. I don’t want it to just be “look at me – look at what I’m doing.” I want to give back and I want to help people accomplish their goals and to stay healthy.
AM: You just joined KT Tape earlier this year. What is it about the brand that is such a great synergy with you and how you operate?
AR: I think KT Tape is essential to being an athlete, to staying healthy in general especially in this time. I don’t have a lot of access to physical therapy and therapists. That’s essential to my program and to staying healthy as I have these aches and pains. Because I have KT Tape, I’m able to use that to support my joints and my muscles. All of last season, it was huge as it was for qualifications. I strained my quad early on in the season and it was kind of a big factor and without being able to use KT Tape and tape it all summer, I think I would have been in so much more pain. I had to tape it through World Championships and all through our biggest tournament. Throughout my whole career, I have leaned on my ability to tape myself and literally keep myself together – so it’s a natural fit. As I get older, I need it more and more.
AM: What kinds of workouts will you be including for your Instagram Live with KT Tape?
AR: Well it’s going to be a shoulder stabilization and strengthening workout. I’m trying to think of things that maybe people have not hit so far and that there aren’t a lot of information on. I think that a lot of us are probably on the couch a good amount hunched over and we’re sitting on the computer a lot with Zoom calls. To try and rectify our posture a little bit, I’m going to touch on that stuff.
AM: Who have been 3 people that have inspired you in your career whether you know them personally, follow them online etc? We like asking our changemakers this question as it’s a key one for our podcast #TRIBEGOALS.
AR: Oh wow! People that have inspired me – I would say that one person who has really helped me get through this time is Glennon Doyle. I’m reading her book and she does little Instagram TV videos daily. I love following her. I have recently been inspired by Megan Rapinoe and how vocal she has been for everything, that is amazing. Then, Dr. Michael Gervais – he is a sports psychologist. I was on a panel for Victoria Garrick, she played at USC and is kind of a mental health advocate. She has me, another athlete and Dr. Gervais on to speak to her and her following. Just listening to him, he gave me a lot of ideas that I could be doing in this time to kind of just get my vision right, my mission, my life philosophies etc. so that when we get out of this, I’m all in alignment – spiritually. He’s definitely someone that has influenced me as well.
PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS | PG 16 - 21 + 29 Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire | PG 22 - 27 + 30 KT Tape - Editorial Design by Athleisure Mag |
Hear 2 X Team USA Olympic Beach Volleyball Medalist, April Ross on our show, #TRIBEGOALS - which is a part of Athleisure Studio, our multi-media podcast network! Make sure to subscribe to find out when the episode drops. You can hear it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, iHeart Radio, Google Podcasts and wherever you enjoy listening to your favorite podcast.
Read the May issue of Athleisure Mag and see To the Beach with April Ross in mag.
We're all settling into new routines and we caught up with WBA's 18-0 flyweight champion, Seniesa "Superbad" Estrada who is taking the boxing world by storm by breaking barriers one fight at a time! We took some time with Golden Boy Promotions' boxer as she is in the midst of training for her July match. She shared her journey through the sport, her passion that began for it when she watched with her father as well as how she stayed focus despite obstacles that stood in her way. We also talked about her partnerships as well as having the support of Danny Trejo noted actor of Machete and Predators as well as restaurateur of Trejos Tacos. She even shared how she wants to give back to her community and those with an interest in boxing. Finally, she shares how she has set up her training as we continue to live in these uncertain times.
ATHLEISURE MAG: When was the moment that you realized that you loved this sport and that you wanted to be involved in it?
SENIESA ESTRADA: When I was about 6 years old, I believe. I would watch boxing fights with my dad. My parents divorced when I was 1. The only time that I would see my dad was on the weekends and I would go over to his house. Every weekend, there would be a big Pay-Per-View fight that was on. He would order it for us to watch or we would just watch a classic boxing fight from an old tape that he had – Sugar Ray Leonard, Mike Tyson – all the great fighters. The first moment that I watched the fight, it would intrigue me and everything just made sense to me and I knew that that was what I wanted to do.
AM: When did you actually start and who was your coach?
SE: I started when I was 8. From the age of 6 that’s when I watched it and I really wanted to box. I spent 6-8 months just asking him if we could go to the gym and start boxing. But he was totally against it. I remember when I would ask that he would tell me that boxing was for boys and I could do cheerleading or something like that. I remember thinking, “cheerleading – that’s so boring.” My brothers played baseball from t-ball all the way to high school. I was always at the park with them and I loved baseball, it is my second favorite sport. Even for baseball, he was against that too as he felt that that was for boys.
The very first gym that I went to was just a little outside of East LA and my dad walked into the gym and the trainer said, “oh she’s too young and we usually work with people who are 13. Bring her back when she is 13 – plus she’s a girl and we don’t really train girls.” My dad got in the car and he told me what the trainer had said and I started crying. At that point, my dad realized how much I really wanted to start boxing and he took me to a local gym in the neighborhood that he grew up in at the Colmbacke center and it’s a great place with a boxing program free for all kids and it was an awesome place. The very first trainer that I had when I walked into the gym, I remember that he said, “you want to box?” The gym was filled with little boys and I was the only girl in there. He said, “ok I’m going to train you, but I’m going to tell you right now that I am going to treat you just like one of the boys. I’m not going to treat you any different.” I said, “ok” and we started from there and I haven’t stopped since.
AM: That’s a great story and at what point did you decide that you were going to go pro and what led to that decision?
SE: I would say when I was 16, I won the USA National Championship which ranked me #1 in the US. The first Women’s Olympic Boxing was going to be in 2012 which was 3 years later. At that point, I had had over 100 amateur fights already. I wasn’t sure - I didn’t want to wait another 3 years. I was tired as I had been doing a lot of traveling for tournaments. I also fractured my toe – I dropped a weight in the gym on it. The toe kind of kept me from being able to compete and there was just a lot going on from the injury as well as waiting 3 years so I decided to turn pro. Turning pro, I didn’t realize how the transition was different. When you’re in the amateurs, there is pretty much a tournament every month and you’re fighting constantly. When you turn pro, it’s not like that. Especially for women, now it’s great, but back then it was different. It was difficult to get a fight, it was difficult to get signed by a big promoter. I was fighting every 7 months and sometimes, every 8 months. So I didn’t realize how different the transition was and how dead women’s boxing was. Just to see the change now – the difference, that change has only taken place in the last 2 years. It’s insane to see the difference of where boxing was 5 years ago vs. today. It’s only getting bigger and better now which is something that I am looking forward to in the future.
AM: To know that it has only been in the last few years that these changes have taken place is really interesting. In doing our research of you as a female fighter, being Mexican-American, winning the women’s Golden Gloves match, being signed under Oscar de la Hoya’s Golden Boy Promotions – you have had so many firsts that you have broken through. What was your motivation to continue to play the sport with all of these things that could have impeded you from breaking through?
SE: My motivation, I would say that there were so many times that I wanted to give up. I knew that I didn’t want to live my life wondering if I could have done it if I gave up. That was the biggest motivator for me and kept me going.
AM: What is a typical training session like for you normally and since we’re all staying in due to COVID-19, how have you modified those kinds of things to stay fit?
SE: Typical training, I would do strength and conditioning for 1 hour to an hour and a half. Then I would go to the boxing gym and I would be there for about 3 hours. But now, it’s been a little different of course. We have been running at the parkas well as training there. I have also trained in my dad’s backyard. We got as much equipment as we could out of the gym to the backyard. So we’ve been doing that. It’s a lot different not having a boxing ring and easy access to everything, but I was talking about it with my trainer. We’re getting ready for a fight that is supposed to take place in July – what we’re getting ready fo. We’re not able to spar but I have been through so many training camps where I couldn’t get any sparring and I only sparred 6 rounds during the whole training camp which is insane. So all of the little obstacles that I have dealt with throughout my career this isn’t difficult because I have been through this before as it comes to training. We actually didn’t have a gym for awhile years back. So we trained at the park so I have done this before.
AM: What is it like on fight day for you? Are there certain routines that you have leading up to the fight?
SE: I would say that he day of the fight, I just like to be left alone. I don’t really like to have friends or family around me. I don’t like to talk. I just want to stay focused and be by myself on the day leading up to the fight. I get very nervous. So many people are surprised to hear that I get so nervous because it doesn’t show especially when I get into the ring – it doesn’t show.
Having so much amateur experience and just being as good as I am, people don’t expect that from me. But I do, my hands are just dripping in sweat and I don’t eat. I mean, you’re supposed to eat a good breakfast of course which is good for the body and to have lunch if you can, but I get so nervous that I can’t eat that much the morning of or anything.
AM: Who have been your mentors in this sport?
SE: I would say, my dad. Because he’s been through so much personally and has overcome so much. As far as him being in and out of prison, addicted to drugs and changing his life. He’s been my number 1 supporter and has always made sure that I have never gave up and I always continue to have faith in myself and faith in God. He is the one person that no matter how down I’m feeling or no matter what it is that he is there to lift me up and to put my head in the right place.
AM: You have had a phenomenal career, you’re 18-0. What do you think about that and what are your goals that you want to do in the sport as you have such a dynamic career?
SE: In the sport, I just want to continue to elevate the sport of women’s boxing to be better. It won’t be easy for all female fighters, but all I can do is continue to accomplish my goals and for people to see me and recognize me so that they can be more open minded to watching women’s boxing and supporting other women in the sport. Of course, my goal is to win multiple titles in 3 different weight divisions – which is definitely something that I want.
AM: We know that you signed with RVCA the SoCal sportswearbrand, you have partnerships with Ladder – why are these great fits for your brand and are there others that you will be apart of as well?
SE: RVCA is a great fit for me because, it’s difficult to find a brand that really supports you no matter what during the ups and the downs. I feel that there are a lot of sponsors and brands that will only want to work with you when you’re at the top and winning. RVCA has been with me even before I had a deal with them. They supported me and have always been there. Pat, who is the owner of RVCA, the way he’s so genuine and that’s what really got my attention. It was the kind of brand that I wanted to work with and the kind of relationship that I wanted to have. I didn’t just want to wear the clothing and represent them. i wanted a relationship and to have a feeling of loyalty. That’s what stood out to me about RVCA and why I liked the brand, the people, the athletes and those who work for them. Everyone is just really good people and that’s what I appreciate about RVCA. Ladder is a great company and they have been great to work with and I love the products. I have always had a hard time finding supplements that I liked. Supplements that are actually working – I have never really felt that until I found Ladder and everything tastes good which is very important and it works.
AM: That is the perfect combo. You also have a sponsorship or partnership with Danny Trejos? We love his taco destination, Trejos Tacos, his movies and his personality. How did that happen and has he given you any advice on staying motivated?
SE: He’s great! Daniel my publicist, actually worked with him when he was at the LA Rams and introduced me to him as they became close friends. He’s amazing and super supportive. He is someone that is just great to have and genuine as he cares for his close friends and his family. I am grateful to know him. I would tell people – because they ask me, “how is Danny?” I always tell them an example. If he is doing an interview, he would invite me to come along with him so that we could talk about me. Every week, I will get a random call from him on a Mon or a Wed. I would say, “hey what’s up.” I would wonder what he needed. He was like, “nothing just checking up on you.” A call to check up and not because he wants to say something or wants something specifically. I don’t even have friends or family that do those calls that are just to check up! Everytime I tell people that, they find it interesting. No matter what he has going on or movies that he’s in, he still takes the time to think about people that he cares about.
AM: When you look at goals as a brand or things that you want to be involved in to add to that – what do you envision for yourself whether it’s in the sport or an adjacent area?
SE: As far as outside of the ring, I’d like to motivate those that are in the inner city and communities that I grew up in. I’d like to open up a gym in a community like where I grew up in. I know that a lot of gyms are expensive now. Being able to start boxing back at home in the community center that was a free program. My parents couldn’t have afforded being at a gym where there was a monthly fee and I know how important that is. Especially when there is a family that 3 or 4 kids that want to box – it’s not easy to pay $125 for each kid for a gym fee. I’d like to open a gym close to my community, have it affordable and classes for counseling. That way, everyday that you’re going to the gym, it’s a place where you can feel comfortable to talk about what is going on in your life and around you.
AM: I think that it’s awesome that you would want to create that in order to merge that balance between athleticism and mental health!
SE: I think it’s really important for kids and the community to find someone or a place where they are really comfortable speaking about these things going on in their life. AM: You were saying that you are training for the fight taking place in July. Is there a place that we should keep an eye out for on your social? SE: Yes! We’re looking at July. I think Golden Boy hasn’t said a date but I know their first boxing fight will be then. So I’m just preparing for that on any date in July.
PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY | Seniesa "Superbad" Estrada
Hear 18-0 WBC boxer, Seniesa "Superbad" Estrada on our show, Bungalow SK - which is a part of Athleisure Studio, our multi-media podcast network! Make sure to subscribe to find out when the episode drops. You can hear it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, iHeart Radio, Google Podcasts and wherever you enjoy listening to your favorite podcast.
Read the May Issue of Athleisure Mag and see She’s Superbad with Seniesa Estrada in mag.
On today’s episode of #TRIBEGOALS, we catch up with 2 X Team USA Olympic Beach Volleyball medalist, April Ross (she is also Athleisure Mag's May 2020 Issue #53). Avid readers know that we interviewed a few months after she won Bronze at the Olympic Games in Rio with her teammate, Kerri Walsh Jennings. Today we talk about how she continues to train as she looks towards the AVP schedule which is currently postponed as well as focusing on the Olympic Games in Tokyo that are slated to begin the summer of 2021. She shares her transition from indoor volleyball to beach, staying fit by creating her backyard gym and her sponsorship by KT Tape and staying active.
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
We're excited to have Daria Berenato for this month's cover. She wrestles in the WWE under the name of Sonya Deville. This athlete started as an MMA fighter and transitioned into becoming a WWE Superstar who uses her platform as an activist for the LGBTQ community, supporting those that are looking to break barriers and of course continuing to expand her empire in fashion, acting and more. We also talked about her upcoming fight with former tag team partner, Mandy Rose on WWE SmackDown on May 8th!
ATHLEISURE MAG: Great to catchup with you and an honor to have you as our cover as we've enjoyed having Nattie, Carmella/Leah Van Dale, Naomi/Trinity Fatu, as well - when was the moment that you realized that you wanted to be an athlete?
DARIA BERENATO: Oh my God, an athlete? From the first! I used to play basketball at 4 or 5 years old in the driveway. I spent my entire life playing sports from basketball to lacrosse, soccer, track and field. Then on to MMA – Mixed Martial Arts to professional wrestling. So, I don’t even know what my life would look like without sports!
AM: I remember you on WWE Tough Enough but you actually started as an MMA fighter! What was it about that sport that drew you to it and what was your transition to wrestling and joining the WWE?
DB: Yeah so when I was 15 or 16 years old, I was in high school and I played school sports my entire life. I just wanted a change of space and I wanted something different. I always had dreams of graduating from high school, moving far away and being on TV and acting as that was always a passion of mine. I wanted to explore something else also. I didn’t know if it was going to be playing a musical instrument or a marital art.
This was a discussion that I had with my mom one day. I had been watching a lot of MMA videos and had been watching Gina Carano, a big female fighter back in the early 2000’s/2010 probably when I was watching her. I thought it would be so cool to see a chick in a cage and get into a fight and then you see her interviews in a dress. It was so cool to see someone so badass and then to be able to see her feminine side. I liked the idea of someone being beautiful and then being tough at the same time. It was really cool and I became obsessed with the MMA. I started watching every UFC and every Pay-Per-View fight night and eventually I was like, “I want to fight MMA,” and my mom was like, “I don’t even know where you would do that around here.” There weren’t any UFC gyms around here to do that. I went to a local boxing gym that was 45 minutes from my house and I started boxing judo and Jiu-Jitsu and I just loved how pure the sport was. I loved how it was a one woman sport, but that you had a whole team of coaches and training partners that you needed to work with together to get the win and stuff. It was just a really cool community and I loved it. So I moved to Florida to train with American Top Team which is one of the best teams in the world when I was 17. Literally, the day of my high school graduation, I drove down to Florida.
AM: Wow!
DB: Yes. I’m really impulsive like that. When I want something, I will do anything to get it and my heart and my mind is 120% in what I do. So yes, MMA is what I did. I fought and trained while also pursuing acting at the same time. I did that for the next 4 or 5 years and finally, I was hosting AfterBuzz TV podcast in LA where I was living at the time. Maria Menounos, is also part of the WWE family and used to be on E! News.
AM: She’s actually in this month’s issue as well! Completely random that this happened!
DB: No way! Aww that is like so perfect! So her and her husband owned Afterbuzz TV and they became mentors to me. They just took me under their wing and told me that they loved my attitude and they loved my spirit. They thought that I could do something special. So the WWE asked Maria to be on Tough Enough as a contestant and she was like, “hell no. I’m too old for this. But I have the perfect girl and she’s a fighter.” They called me and they thought I was going to say no because they thought that I was so MMA that I wouldn’t want to depart from it.
But they called me and I said yes right away because I saw the opportunity. I didn’t necessarily think that that meant leaving MMA at that moment, I just thought that it was a competition and reality show that sounded like a good opportunity. I just said, let’s do it. That led me to WWE and I ended up getting it. I mean, I was working my butt off to be ready for the tryout and to do the best that I could. I kind of felt out of place at tryouts because there were a lot of bikini world champions like Mandy and fitness models and I was just this little rough around the edges Jersey girl who fought MMA. I definitely stood out in that sense.
A couple of months later, I was hired and the rest was kind of history. I just fell in love with the world of WWE. It was everything that I had always been looking for. It was the performing and competition aspect all rolled into one for my career. Honestly, it was so meant to be and it’s just exactly where I should be.
AM: In terms of Sonya Deville, can you tell us about this persona and what are the similarities and differences between you and her?
DB: When I was first developing Sonya’s character, she was very simplistic at first. She was just a badass that was an MMA fighter who was coming into this world. All she cared about was fighting and winning. She’s a very straight to the point kind of character. Over time, being with Absolution (trio that comprised Paige, Mandy Rose and Sonya Deville) on RAW and being on Fire and Desire (tag team of Mandy Rose and Sonya Deville) on SmackDown with Mandy and working with Paige in the past. It all kind of added to the persona of Sonya Deville. Because life experiences make us who we are as people.
So that’s kind of the case with Sonya. She was definitely third wheeling it a little with Absolution and with Fire and Desire, took a backseat to Mandy Rose because it was about Mandy’s magazine covers ironically. It was Sonya always taking the back seat to everything that Mandy was doing because that was just the dynamic of the team. So, Sonya had enough and a lot of what you’re seeing now on SmackDown is a compilation of everything that Sonya has been through emotionally. Everyone is starting to realize that Sonya is a bad B.
AM: Yeah she is!
DB: She doesn’t mess around and she has a little bit of an anger issue I think that we are starting to see and a little bit of an anger problem. But she’s calculated and much more calculated than what I think that we ever thought Sonya was. She’s not as impulsive as she once was. She’s more calculated and every move and everything that she does is made with intention and purpose.
AM: You guys have a fight this Fri on SmackDown!
DB: Yes we do!
AM: The internet is all over the place talking about this. So many of our readers are asking what you can tell us about this and any goodies you can tell as we will drop this issue a few hours before your fight!
DB: Oh wow! I think that you’re going to see a side of Sonya Deville that you have never seen before. Nobody has ever seen this before! She’s been waiting to get her hands on Mandy Rose for years! You have to understand that this isn’t something that just developed over night. The fans are just seeing it happen overnight because Sonya has been keeping it inside just planning and bottling it up. They have to understand that this is a plan that has been coming to fruition that has been in the works for 4 years. 4 years that Sonya has been getting stepped on and has been keeping a mental piggy bank of things that she can use against Mandy Rose. You’re going to see all of that come to fruition on Friday night!
AM: Oh my gosh. Well obviously we can’t wait to see all of this, how it develops and what happens afterwards.
So right now, when you look at the word normal, it’s an interesting word to say, but when you look at an average week as a WWE Superstar, what is it like with you training, getting prepared for matches and you guys are actively still participating in your sport where others are not able to do this. How has that been for you?
DB: We’ve all just kind of developed our own systems at home. Because obviously no gyms are open so I have been training in my home gym that I have built over the past few months. It’s great and I’m blessed that I have it as it is a space that allows me to stay in shape and ready at all times for the ring.
When we show up to film, it’s a completely closed set and we’re doing everything that we can – no crowd nothing! I think it’s pretty remarkable to see that we are able to go forward in a way that is still keeping everyone safe and healthy, but also being able to put a product on television right now so that people can hopefully be distracted for a few hours of their week and not have to think about everything else that is going on out there in the world right now.
AM: We totally agree with you. When your shows were coming out, we wondered how you would be able to do what you guys do without an audience. But when you’re watching it, you’re still seeing the drama as if there were a million people in that room. We commend you for that. The amount of travel that you guys do, the hours you spend going from one place to another while being fresh faced and ready to give it all for your fans is just something that you guys do as a team that is so great.
DB: Thank you. I mean being part of the WWE, it’s a very special thing and very unique. Because of the scheduling, the travel, the amount of shows that we put on a year that people don’t realize. So in a time like this, we have to reinvent the wheel a little bit and recreate. It’s fun for me as an artist and as a performer. It’s been super fun for me to have to dig a little deeper and to see what we can do to still put on an incredible show without the fans. Obviously, the fans are a huge part of what we do.
AM: In terms of training, what are your go-to workouts that you focus on to stay fit and what are workouts that we can do at home?
DB: I switch it up almost every day. Because it obviously gets monotonous to do the same thing every day. I’ll wake up some mornings and do a mile run or an 8-10 mile bike ride on the days that I don’t feel like lifting weights. Some days I don’t feel like lifting weights and my body is telling me to take it easy on the weights. So I’ll just do some cardio on some days or do some laps to the pool. Some days I will do a full on lift mode for weight training. Usually I will do a high intensity workout or a circuit workout one day a week. Then the other 3 or 4 days, I will do an actual weight lifting workout which will have a back and thigh day, shoulders and tri day or a lower body day. That’s kind of how I break up my week.
I’m always switching it up and I always say that if you have a kettlebell or a dumbbell, there is so much that you can do. The options are endless and they’re still available if you go on Amazon and so many other websites that are still selling them. Resistance bands are so amazing. I have a couple of at home workouts that are on my YouTube channel – Daria Berenato. You just have to reinvent the wheel a little bit right?
AM: What are your 3 power foods that you like to eat when you're training?
DB: Redcon1 Mint Chocolate Chip Protein is my favorite thing in this entire world! I’m obsessed. There’s these Kodiak Protein Pancakes mix that are the best in the entire world that I have had in my entire life. Eggs are then my day one go to! I probably have them 6 days a week if not 7. Eggs are so easy and I will do egg whites a lot too. It’s easy to get protein.
AM: One of the things that we love about you is the fact that we know that you’re athletic, you have a fitness focus and you also enjoy eating fun stuff like donuts and other things like that. That’s so important as coming from a fashion/fitness perspective, there are so many people that make others feel bad that even those who do take care of their bodies – that there is a stigma if you engage in that. You’re able to hold both of those things and you normalize that. Why was that so important to you to include that and bring it into your brand for fans to also see that.
DB: I truly believe that life is all about balance. I definitely have a type of personality where if I become focused on working out, I become obsessed with working out. If I’m dieting, I become obsessed with dieting. I’ve always kept a really healthy balance with my diet. Ever since stopping MMA, in MMA you’re dieting and your carb depleted and calorie depleted because you’re cutting weight for your fight. That was super stressful on the body and the mind. So when I switched over to WWE as a professional wrestler, where we don’t have weight classes and a weight to make, I kind of promised myself never to diet that hard again just because I didn’t like how I felt even mentally doing it. Now I have developed something that works for me. Everybody’s body is different, we have different genetics and we work out and train differently too. But I have gotten my body to a point where I know what I can and can’t have in a week and what I need to do to burn it off if I do want to have it. That’s how I think. Work hard, play hard is definitely a motto that I have that follows me into the kitchen too. I love donuts, I love pizza – I probably have pizza once a week, I’m not even going to lie.
AM: Nice.
DB: Yup, I have those pancakes, they’re protein – but they’re still pancakes. I have them probably once or twice a week. I like to enjoy my food for sure. Me and Mandy had our donut show DAMANDYZ DONUTS which is now Daria’s Donuts! We don’t do that show together and I have been producing my own content for that show. I think she has been doing her own show. I don’t pay attention to her in what she does. It’s been really fun to try different donut places all over the world and I cooked my own for the first time.
AM: How’d that go?
DB: It was an absolute mess in the kitchen! But they actually didn’t taste that bad!
AM: Well there you go!
DB: I baked them, I need to fry them next time.
This week, I’m dropping a poolside workout for my fans. So it’s a really cool brand that we have created with Daria’s Donuts and is everything that we have talked about with health, fitness and a little bit of enjoyment and lifestyle stuff.
AM: What is your favorite donut in your favorite city?
DB: In Louisiana, I’ll never forget when I took a bite out of this donut. It was in Lafayette, Louisiana and it’s called Meche's Donut King. It’s a tiny little hole in the wall. Best donut that I have ever had in my life.
AM: What donut was it?
DB: A hot, classic glazed donut. But it was warm, the bread was moist and it was just perfect.
AM: I've been a fan of E! Total Divas and have enjoyed seeing your storyline on it. What was it about being on this show that made you want to be apart of it?
DB: They auditioned me for Total Divas two years in a row actually. The year before, they decided not to add anybody new. When they asked me to do it, I immediately said yes. I love Total Divas, I think it is one of the coolest shows because it gives the mainstream demographic a look into our lives. People don’t watch wrestling – like growing up, I didn’t watch wrestling. But I remember walking into my mom’s room and she had on Total Divas. It was the episode when Nattie busted her nose or something like that. I’ll never forget it. I asked my mom who the girls were and if they were wrestlers because I couldn’t understand it. She explained it to me and I knew I wanted to do that.
I swear on my life, I went online and went to apply. I don’t remember why, but I couldn’t apply. Either I wasn’t 18 yet or at the time, you couldn’t have tattoos. Either way I forget. There was some stipulation on the website where I told my mom that I couldn’t do it yet. It’s really funny because life comes full circle!
I was intrigued through Total Divas because I watched E! It was such a cool look to show our world and what goes on behind the scenes for those that don’t watch wrestling. Maybe looking at it could help them get into wrestling, enjoy the sport and fall in love with it just like we did. It’s really been fun and it was a no brainer when they asked. Of course, I was nervous about putting my whole entire life out there – my family, my friends and my relationship. That was nerve wracking. Obviously, it's much more nerve wracking to be yourself on camera versus playing a character on camera. It was a really cool experience and I feel like I have learned a lot more about myself doing it and I would definitely do it again.
AM: Who are you close to in the WWE that you consider being in your squad?
DB: Well Mandy was. Liv Morgan, Carmella – those are the ones that I’m closest too. Bayley, Becky Lynch – those are like my girls.
AM: Love that. Once again seeing all of those interactions on the show is fun for the Athleisure Media team as we love seeing a number of the people that we have done photoshoots and interviews with and seeing how their personalities on the show are just like when they were with us on set. Or seeing a scene and knowing that we were with them the day before.
DB: Right! That’s funny. We have such a good locker room because we all get along so well – we’re blessed. We have Trin, Saronas – we have such a cool locker room.
AM: We have been media sponsors for the past 4 years of NYC Pride as we think it's so important to celebrate and be allies to the LGBTQ community. As the first openly lesbian Superstar in the WWE how important was it for your to share your sexuality and how can the WWE improve representation and equality?
DB: Absolutely. It’s funny and I’m reminded every single day why I share my story and why I’m open about my life to the fans. Obviously, it’s not the easiest decision and not the easiest way to live. It’s much easier to just be yourself and to think that no one needs to know. I chose to share my story and I’m s happy that I did because I hear from people every single day that they are struggling with coming out and figuring who they are and sharing it with their loved ones, family and friends. We’ve made leaps and bounds in the LGBTQ community and in the world with acceptance and equality. But there is still so much to do. The fight is never over and I think it is so important to have an ally in the public eye. For me when I was growing up, the only gay person that I ever saw on TV was Ellen Degeneres and so there wasn’t many other representatives that I knew at the time.
So for me, a closeted gay girl that grew up in a small town in south New Jersey, I didn’t even think that it was a thing. I didn’t think that I could possibly be gay because I didn’t know anybody that was. I would have thoughts and I would push them way down in there because I didn’t think it could be. It seemed far fetched and I didn’t allow myself to be who I was. I find a lot of light in being able to do that for this generation’s Daria. I want to be the voice for the little me that never had one. For all of these kids, teens and adults who are dealing with these things now – they know who they are but they don’t have anyone to talk to about it or they don’t think it’s ok – just help them with their struggling emotions and let them know that it is more than ok. It’s more than ok to be who you are, it’s more than ok to love who you love and there is nothing to be apologetic about. Anybody who is meant to be in your life, will remain in your life, those who aren’t will exit. Everything happens for a reason and there is no love that is not pure.
I like to be that voice because I know all to well that feeling of not feeling you have anyone to relate to.
AM: What LGBTQ initiatives do you support?
DB: About a year or two ago we worked with WWE to get the first line of LGBTQ wrestling shirts. I got my “Put Your Hair Up and Square Up” rainbow shirt, Finn Balor got his, Becky Lynch got hers, Charlotte Flair – a bunch of Superstars I think 10 of them got them. The proceeds of the rainbow shirts went to GLAAD We were on the GLAAD Pride parade float in the NYC World Pride Parade. I was the representative for that! I got to ride the float and to represent WWE which was a super cool experience. We did the Spirit Day Lounge and NY ComicCon a few years back in NY. Slowly but surely, we’re getting a lot more involvement with community and I push for it every year. We’re always having meetings about it and what we can do to represent.
I have my own line called Rainbow Love which is completely LGBTQ friendly forward clothing line. One of the first shirts that we dropped said, “You Are Not Alone” with the Suicide Prevention Hotline on the back. It’s a super cool shirt and one of my favorite designs in the entire line. It’s so strong and it’s just so powerful. It just speaks for itself and lets you know that you shouldn’t be afraid to talk – to reach out for help to talk to somebody as we’re all going through shit and life isn’t every easy, but there is always a light at the end of the tunnel with a silver lining. It’s ok to have a Heavy Heart, but Rainbow Love. There’s a bigger line which is called Heavy Heart which this is apart of.
There’s a bunch of different ways that I try to do stuff like that. This year, I had planned on being on 6 or 7 Pride floats with the WWE behind me. Obviously, plans have changed on that a little bit, but we are working and talking about how we can be there to support virtually.
I look back at myself before I came out and know that I wasn’t able to be myself. When you’re keeping this secret from people that you are close with and those that you love the most, and you can’t act the way you want to in public it’s such a depressing feeling – it affects and manifests in ways that you can’t imagine and you don’t realize it. I mean, hindsight is 20-20 and all I can say to people is that being open and honest with who I was was the best decision that I ever made.
AM: Tell us about Quibi's WWE unscripted series "Fight Like a Girl."
DB: This was a really cool project. WWE partnered with Quibi which is a network with bite sized videos and a new series called “Fight Like a Girl,” focuses on a young woman who wants to make changes in her life for the better. She is teamed up with a WWE Superstar to help reach those goals and accomplishments. They go through a training program at the state of the art WWE Performance Center in Orlando as well as an extensive physical training, emotional training, mental training and mentorship program with Superstars. It’s really a cool show. I was partnered with a girl named Samantha who was closeted to half of her family and she was nervous to tell her father’s side. We just talked honestly and I just told her my journey and I think she was able to relate to the things that I said. I used fitness and force and working out as my biggest crutch when I was going through everything. It was my sanity and happy place when I was going through a lot of the stuff that I have been through. I think she was able to relate to that and she really got into working out and got in incredible shape and it was such a cool experience to see her total mind and body transformation. It was really cool.
AM: Circling back, we were talking about your clothing line, Rainbow Love, how did the line come about?
DB: My good friend Bobbie owns Black Craft clothing which is in Hot Topic and a couple of other stores. He wanted to expand and make a new line as he had been working on that for years. He wanted to make a new line, Heavy Heart and he called me up to be apart of it. He said that he didn’t know the kinds of things that I was into, but he knew that I wanted to make a clothing line anyway. He asked me if I wanted my own line under Heavy Heart. I would be able to name it, come up with the concept – whatever. We went back and forth for months with ideas and throwing things against the wall to see what would stick. I told him that I wanted to do something that I was passionate about and I didn’t want to just throw a logo on a shirt and call it a day. I suggested doing a LGBTQ forward line and he thought it was dope. We came up with the “You’re Not Alone Shirt” with the Suicide Prevention Hotline and a few other shirts, another one called True Colors, a couple that just says Rainbow Love with a cool graphic of my face on it. We just hand designed all of the stuff and we wanted the line to be very raw. We wanted it to speak for itself and let people know that it is ok to express your emotions and to be as dark or as bright as you feel. Life’s not always perfect and it’s ok to be in your feels. It’s ok to have a Heavy Heart, but Rainbow Love. It’s been really cool and I think the fan response has been incredible.
We’re trying to set something up where maybe one of our product’s proceeds will go to a charity or maybe a percentage of all of the products will. We don’t know all the details yet but we are working on that. I just want to be able to help in any way that I can with Suicide Prevention and LGBTQ community in general. It’s been so cool and my fans love it because it is something that they can relate to. The clothing line is friendly to them. It’s more inclusivity that’s subtle but really sweet at the same time.
I wanted it to be clothes that I would rock everyday that you would see me in. I wear the shirts all the time and it’s totally my vibe. Obviously, it’s black because I wear a lot of that, but it’s got the color pop on it too and that matches with my personality as well. I am a little social butterfly despite my dark character persona with Sonya Deville. It’s relatable and true to who I am.
AM: A number of people from the WWE like Dwayne Johnson and John Cena have gone on to having movie careers, competition reality shows etc - do you have plans to follow in their footsteps?
DB: That’s been a goal of mine as acting is my passion and my first dream! Something I have always kept in mind is that you have to go where your path takes you. You have to work hard, but if life hands you a lemon – you have to make lemonade. That’s what I did. I got a little off of the path of becoming an actor, but I actually found something that could get me there in a better way in my opinion. To follow in the footsteps of John Cena, Dwayne Johnson and Dave Bautista – guys that have come over from WWE and stepped into Hollywood. That’s ultimately the long time game plan. I want to act in television and in film. I’d love to be in The Mandalorian or The Fast and The Furious.
AM: Could so see that.
DB: Right? It would be so fun! I feel like I have created a little brand for myself with WWE and that’s just going to continue to grow and it will make the transition nice and smooth. In the meantime, I have been working with an acting coach, Sean Whalen for the last 2 years. I have been putting in extra hours which isn’t always easy when you’re on the road, but it has helped tremendously with everything that I do from WWE to acting. That’s my goal to be the first female that has made that huge leap.
AM: What advice do you have for women and girls on how they should blaze their own trails in career and in life?
DB: Well if it helps any – I was called crazy and ridiculous. I was 17 moving out of my house saying I was going to be a professional MMA fighter and an actor in a time where Ronda Rousey didn’t exist yet in the UFC. It was a horse of a very different path and no one thought that I was capable except for myself. The power of believing in yourself is so strong! I would say, say less – do more. Put your head down and work your ass off and you can literally accomplish anything. My story is a testament to that. There were so many times that I got down on myself and I said, "I'm not going to make it," I still woke up every day at 6am and trained for 4 hours and then bartended until 2am and did it all over again. You’ve got to grind if you want it. Just don’t ever give up on your dreams. There’s nothing more gratifying in your life than living your dreams.
AM: We like asking people who are 3 people that inspire them in their careers or in life whether you know them personally, follow them online etc?
DB: Ellen Degeneres for sure, Gina Carano and I’m going to go with my mom. Everyone plays a certain role. Ellen showed me at a very young age so much strength and resilience. She wasn’t only in a very male dominated world but a hetero dominated world. She broke down so many barriers for women and LGBTQ people. She’s inspirational in her own right and went through so many struggles being who she is.
Gina Carano was the first pioneer of the MMA for women and was one of the first huge female superstars that people would actually pay to go see. She’s incredibly badass.
My mom is just the definition of unconditional love and support. Although everyone else called my dreams crazy, she did not call them crazy and for that, she is my day one!
PHOTOS COURTESY | PG 16, 26, 28, 30 + 32 WWE | PG 18 + 21 Vince Trupsin | PG 22, 24 + 39 Ryan Loco | PG 35 TOTAL DIVAS -- Season 9 Gallery -- Pictured: Sonya -- (Photo by: Brian Bowen Smith/E! Entertainment) | PG 36 TOTAL DIVAS -- Maui Vacation -- Pictured: (l-r) Carmella, Sonya -- (Photo by: Mario Perez/E! Entertainment) |
Hear WWE Superstar & E! Total Divas', Daria Berenato/Sonya Deville this month on our show, #TRIBEGOALS -which is a part of Athleisure Studio, our multi-media podcast network! Make sure to subscribe to find out when the episode drops. You can hear it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, iHeart Radio, Google Podcasts and wherever you enjoy listening to your favorite podcast.
Read the April Issue of Athleisure Mag and see From the Ring to the World with Daria Berenato in mag.
On May 8th and 9th in West Palm Beach, FL for the UTR Pro Match Series powered by Oracle which was broadcast live on Tennis Channel. This event marks the first live tennis tournament during COVID-19 where the sport can be played locally and safely with 1:1 match play. It’s worth noting that players engaged in “stick fives” were the new high fives, hand sanitizing stations replaced communal water coolers, and players prepped and recovered in individual socially distanced tents on a grassy field. During the matches, winners waved to invisible fans that were not in attendance and they tossed towels to invisible ballkids that were not there as well.
On day 1 of the series, Hubert Hurkacz (UTR 15.35) of Poland got the day started by winning seven consecutive games and defeating former Roland Garros boys’ champion Tommy Paul (UTR 15.31) 4-2 4-0. Big-serving American Reilly Opelka (UTR 15.51) then defeated former world number one junior Miomir Kecmanovic (UTR 15.38) 4-3(4) 4-0, before also defeating his quarantine roommate Paul 3-4(4) 4-1 4-0 to move to 2-0 on the day. Kecmanovic then bounced back with a 4-3(2) 4-1 win over Hurkacz to close out the day’s action.
The format is a round robin best of 3 Fast 4 sets. This will be the format for the finals and the 3rd/4th place playoff. You can see more videos here.
5.8.2020 | UTR PRO MATCH SERIES MEN’S PLAYER LINEUP
Reilly Opelka | Third-ranked American, ATP #39, UTR 15.51 (#25)
Miomir Kecmanović | ATP Next Gen Semifinalist, ATP #47, UTR 15.38 (#43)
Hubert Hurkacz | 2019 Winston-Salem Open Champion, ATP #29, UTR 15.35 (#47)
Tommy Paul | Sixth-ranked American, ATP #57, UTR 15.31 (#58)
American Reilly Opelka, World No. 39, captured the title with a 4-3(2), 2-4, 4-2 win in the final. Despite putting on “Quarantine 15”, he served up a big win over Miomir Kecmanovic. “I’m definitely a little sore which is a good feeling. I’m not going to complain about being tired for the first time,” said Opelka in his post match interview. “UTR did a great job advancing and taking advantage of this time [off due to Covid] to put this event on.”
The event involved atypical drone footage and two jib cameras captured the players exchanging “racquet taps” at the end of each match, on-site skeleton crew in PPE, players recovering in their individual open-air tents, and thorough court cleaning between each match.
After the completion of Round Robin play that saw Opelka, Kecmanovic and Hurkacz go 2-1 in their matches, the big-serving American and young Serb advanced to the championship round. Hurkacz defeated Paul 4-1, 0-4, 4-1 in the third place match to move to 3-1 on the weekend, while Opelka’s win in the championship also helped him go 3-1. All matches this weekend count for each player’s Universal Tennis Rating. Opelka’s UTR 15.55 has his UTR world rank about 10 spots higher than his ATP ranking. Player UTRs changed throughout the tournament reflecting their real-time skill level.
5.9.2020 | UTR PRO MATCH SERIES MEN’S PLAYER LINEUP
Reilly Opelka | Third-ranked American, ATP #39, UTR 15.51 (#25)
Miomir Kecmanović | ATP Next Gen Semifinalist, ATP #47, UTR 15.38 (#43)
Hubert Hurkacz | 2019 Winston-Salem Open Champion, ATP #29, UTR 15.35 (#47)
Tommy Paul | Sixth-ranked American, ATP #57, UTR 15.31 (#58)
The Women’s UTR Pro Match Series will be broadcast live on Tennis Channel Friday May 22 - Sunday May 24; 12:00 PM ET.
TUNE IN | Live on Tennis Channel and TC International, and streaming on Facebook and Twitter @MyUTR and @TennisChannel.
5.22-24.2020 | UTR PRO MATCH SERIES WOMEN’S PLAYER LINEUP
Alison Riske | 4th ranked American, WTA #19, UTR 13.19 (#14)
Amanda Anisimova | 5th ranked American, WTA #28, UTR 13.04 (#33)
Danielle Collins | 8th ranked American, WTA #51, UTR 13.07 (#28)
Ajla Tomljanović | 2nd ranked Australian, WTA #56, UTR 12.85 (#68)
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
Nothing brings back the feeling of childhood like the relief of jumping into the ocean, lake, or pool with the shining summer sun overhead. It’s no wonder why summer has been synonymous to water for many people.
Some of the best activities that people can enjoy during the summer are water sports. There’s never a dull moment with water sports. The cool wind that blows your hair, the deep blue water, and the thrill of competition, racing, and adventure all make everything incredibly fun. Surely, you’ll experience an adrenaline rush and actually enjoy your time to the core.
Here are the top eight must-try water sports that you should try in the summer:
Kitesurfing
Over the last few years, kitesurfing has become increasingly popular, with more and more water enthusiasts turning their attention to this specific water sport. It’s no wonder why you can now find kitesurfing lessons almost everywhere nowadays. It’s the perfect combination of surfing and wakeboarding. A lot of people actually consider it surfing’s next level.
This sport is perfect for those who are seeking a unique kind of thrill and are ready to bring a ton of exciting memories from their summer vacation as they go back to their homes. Kitesurfing is ideal during a windy summer day, enabling you to speed over waves.
2. Kayaking
If you’re living by the beach, go for some coastline kayaking adventure. You can also visit your nearest marina and rent a few there for the day. The good thing about kayaking is that it’s actually a great workout for your core and upper body, on top of being a relaxing way of spending time on the water. Please take note, however, that kayaking is going to expose you to a lot of sunlight, so be sure to bring and wear sunblock. You know how easy it is to lose track of your time when you’re already in the water, right?
3. Paddle Boarding
Many celebrities have started to embrace paddleboarding because it’s actually good for the posture and core. It’s also a fun way of showing your beach body off. Stand up paddleboarding is perfect for those who prefer working out on but not getting in the water. If your next summer or holiday destination is by a beach or a lagoon and you want to exercise, paddleboarding is, no doubt, a water sport you should try.
4. Swimming
Swimming keeps the body fit and active, not to mention the fact that it definitely feels like heaven to dive inside the water during a hot summer day. Swimming, indeed, is one of the most refreshing water sports out there. Doing it at least twice a week or every day as part of your workout routine helps to revive your whole body.
5. Jet Skiing
One of the most action-packed water sports you can try is jet skiing. The speed you can reach as you travel through the water can definitely give you an adrenaline rush. Water enthusiasts and thrill-seekers alike find this water sport very attractive. While it’s always advisable to wear a life jacket when jet skiing as, of course, a precaution, being a professional swimmer isn’t required to enjoy it. This means that anyone can experience this kind of fun!
6. Fly Fishing
All you need is to borrow or rent the right gear, such as a weighted line, a fly rod, as well as wading boots, and you can already try fly fishing. If you’ve been a traditional fishing enthusiast for a while now, it’s maybe time to level up your game or at least experience some kind of a spin from the usual. Fly fishing can give you just that. Make sure, however, that you’re wearing polarized shades when you’re already there in the water. These will help you catch less seaweed and more fish by allowing you to see through the water’s surface more clearly.
7. Snorkeling
The most relaxing of all water sports is snorkeling. It’s also the one that allows you to spend the most time under the water. All you need to do to see the beautiful underwater world is to strap on fins, a pair of goggles, and a snorkel tube so that you can easily breathe. Make sure to pick a location where there’s vibrant reef or fish. Choose a spot in the ocean that’s calm for you to maximize the fun of discovering the color-shimmering environment under the sea.
8. Wakeboarding
If it’s an extreme water sport that you want, then, you should try wakeboarding. This water sport is truly more intense compared to the others mentioned above. With wakeboarding, you won’t have to rely on the waves for moving; a speedboat will actually tow you along the water! Can you imagine how fun that is? You can play around the water using your wakeboard while holding onto the line of the speedboat as it tows you at high speed.
The good thing about wakeboards is that they combine fins and weights so that riders can maneuver them easily over the water. Wakeboarding also doesn’t require a lot of experience as it’s surprisingly easy to run with it.
Conclusion
You can’t possibly hike or trek during the summer, so adventurous travelers like you will really have to find and try new things. Luckily for you, there are various water sports you can choose from, and all of them bring extraordinary fun!
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
We have a number of our favorite broadcasters when it comes to catching up with our favorite sports. When it comes to the NBA, we're excited that this month's cover is the host of ESPN's The Jump, Rachel Nichols. You can also catch her on NBA Saturday Primetime Pregame and Halftime Coverage. We wanted to find out about how her passion for sports led her to journalism/broadcasting, what stories she has enjoyed covering and more.
ATHLEISURE MAG: What was the moment that you realized that you wanted to work in sports?
RACHEL NICHOLS: When I was a kid, watching a game just always seemed better than any movie. You got adventure and clashes and heroes and villains and all of that, except also - unlike a movie where you pretty much know that Spiderman is going to save the city from the alien - with sports you don’t know who is going to win at the end. Sign me up.
AM: How did this translate into your interest in being a journalist/broadcaster?
RN: My personal athletic skills are...not elite. I’m short. My hand-eye coordination is so bad that eating soup can be dangerous. So since I was never gonna make it as a player, this was a great way to be involved in sports with the skills I do have – curiosity, critical thinking, writing.
AM: Prior to coming to ESPN, can you tell us your journey in terms of what school you went to and where you worked?
RN: I went to journalism school at Northwestern University near Chicago, but even before that I was interning at newspapers. I definitely started out wanting to be a writer – I grew up outside Washington DC and thought The Washington Post was the greatest newspaper in the world (still do), and by the time I was 22, I was lucky enough to be working there. I honestly would have been happy staying there forever, but the newspaper business model changed enough that it became clear it would be smart to also learn how to report for TV. I did both for a while, which led to a full-time job at ESPN in 2004.
AM: You were previously at ESPN covering the NFL with SportsCenter, NFL Countdown, Outside the Lines being a sideline reporter on Monday Night Football and being one of the original correspondents on E:60 what was it like working on this coverage?
RN: My first decade at ESPN involved so many sports – NBA coverage, NFL, baseball, college sports, hockey, golf, tennis. I even covered a blueberry pie eating contest once (seriously!) Learning how to bounce around gave me depth, and then the longer I was doing it, the more I bore down to focus on the NFL and the NBA.
AM: When you came back to ESPN you focus on the NBA and are the host of The Jump. We also see you on NBA Saturday Primetime Pregame and Halftime Coverage – what is it like covering these areas?
RN: The NBA is just so fun. There are no helmets, no masks – you get to watch these incredible athletes up-close, sometimes literally flying, and then when they come down to earth they are often some of the most outspoken, interesting, community-minded athletes in sports. NBA culture as a whole has a great sense of humor too - there's just never a boring day covering basketball.
AM: What is your preparation process like when you’re on The Jump for this daily show? How does this differ from when you’re on the court for a pregame show?
RN: When the season is going on, I spend a few hours a night watching games, making notes, and then each morning we have a big meeting to plan that day's show. I write a monologue for the top of the show, working in partnership with producers who really make it sing visually, and that’s where we try to set the tone for our conversations that day. Then it's about having those conversations with some of the smartest people I know – the reporters and former athletes who make up our show universe.
AM: What have been 3 of your favorite interviews that you have conducted?
RN: I’m so fortunate to have gotten to sit down with so many fascinating people. Some of them have been ultra-famous – I’ve interviewed Michael Jordan, Serena Williams, Derek Jeter, Tom Brady, Tiger Woods – and some of them are athletes that most Americans have never heard of, but people have amazing stories of perseverance and grit and all the things we love about sports.
AM: What are 3 interviews that you have yet to do that are in your bucket list to conduct?
RN: I don’t have a “bucket list” – but one thing I really do like is catching people at different moments of change throughout their lives. For example, I first interviewed LeBron James in his senior year of high school, and we’ve sat down and talked for the cameras nearly every year since. Now he’s 35 years old, with three kids and one of the best-ever NBA careers - getting a front-row seat to that journey has been pretty remarkable.
AM: You have been noted as one of the most powerful voices in sports media, what did it mean to be seen this way and how important is it for the continued movement of women in sports?
RN: I grew up reading Christine Brennan write about the NFL for The Washington Post. I didn’t know at the time, she was one of the only women doing that. I didn’t know that if I had lived in any other part of the country, I would have thought that football was only for men. To me it was as simple as “she does that, so I could do that.” Fast-forward to now: Hopefully when young girls see me, that’s what they think. That’s really all it’s about.
AM: Viewers can see you in the studio for The Jump as well as seeing you on the road, why is it important to you to be in both of these areas as opposed to just reporting from the studio?
RN: My career started “in the field,” so it’s how I still approach work. How am I supposed to talk about these players if I’m not regularly talking *to* them? How am I supposed to tell viewers what goes on during games if I’m not at them regularly? To me being out of the studio is just an important component of keeping the show current, and to signal to viewers that if something big is going on, they can count on us to be there.
AM: What is an average week like for you to give our readers insight into what your schedule is like?
RN: Thanks to coronavirus, there’s no ‘average’ for any of us anymore, sadly – but in more normal times, I’m in our LA studio 4-5 days a week, and then traveling 2-3 days to host our ABC Saturday Night game of the week on-site. I also sometimes travel to interview a player, and then there are the games here in LA that I go to once or twice a week, to catch up with players and coaches on not just the local teams but the visiting teams coming through.
AM: What's the best part about covering the playoffs?
RN: Seeing the best of the best go at it – there’s no substitute for that. I was really looking forward to this year’s playoffs, because unlike in recent years, there’s no heavy favorite like the Golden State Warriors. Now, with the NBA season being suspended...I’m just hoping we get to have a playoffs, even if it’s delayed.
AM: For this year’s season, what would you say have been the top 3 stories whether you covered it or not that have dominated this season?
RN: The NBA shutting down due to COVID-19 may be the most pivotal thing that’s ever happened to the league – it’s hard to even think about other storylines compared to that. Prior to the shutdown, we were certainly talking an enormous amount about the dominance of league MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo and about the tremendous level of play we were seeing from LeBron James at age 35, in his 17th year in the league.
AM: As someone who focuses on the NBA, in terms of your work with the ESPN, are there months or weeks during the year that are quieter for you and what do you do during this time?
RN: It’s pretty quiet in August but this year, the NBA is discussing playing basketball at that time – I think really for all of us, schedules are out the window right now. We just want to get back to some normalcy in America at large, and then we can figure out where basketball fits in.
AM: You travel quite a bit, what are 3 things that you like to have in your carry-on to make flying easier?
RN: Headphones! If I forget them on a trip, it’s torture. Whether it’s doing work, or escaping to watch a movie, that’s my No. 1 necessity on a plane. Other than that, I make sure I have an extra battery that my phone can hook into, and I usually bring a snack because airplane food is, well, airplane food.
AM: When you’re not on air, what do you do to take some time for yourself?
RN: I’m super-lucky to get to live in LA to do my job, which means at any time of year I can ride my bike at the beach, go on a hike or just stick my nose outside for 10 minutes to soak up that sunshine Vitamin-D. I also have twin daughters and as every working mom knows, that’s a huge juggling act, but for me being with my family is a great balance to what I do at work. Oh, and wine. God bless a good glass of red wine after the kids go to bed!
AM: Since you live in LA, where could we find you working out, grabbing a bite/ocktail or going shopping?
RN: I really like barre workouts, so when we’re not all self-isolating because of COVID, I go to classes for that. I also have a climbing machine at home for cardio. For cocktails, I’m a big fan of anywhere near the ocean with a good margarita – I like Elephante and Tallula's, which are both in Santa Monica - and the food at Felix in Venice Beach is off the hook. As for shopping – I’m a confirmed on-line shopper. It’s just so much easier with the amount of hours I work and travel, to browse on my phone instead of going into store. Let’s just say me and the UPS guy are really good friends.
AM: From a philanthropic standpoint, are there any organizations that you give your time to?
RN: With the country reeling from COVID-19 right now, my focus is on any organization that’s helping fill the gaps. Medical supplies for hospitals, food for kids who usually depend on meals at school but aren’t going to school right now. We’re in a national crisis - it’s scary and weird and one of the only things we really know about how to make it better is to just do as much as we can to help each other.
Our photoshoot took place at TAO Group Hospitality's Magic Hour which is located at Moxy Times Square. This has become a destination where it makes guests that are 21+ feel like they are in an adult playground. We sat down with Magic Hour's Rooftop Bar & Lounge Beverage Director, Nikki McCutcheon to find out more about this midtown property.
ATHLEISURE MAG: We had a great time shooting at Magic Hour for our cover shoot located at the Moxy Times Square, can you tell us a bit about all the TAO Group properties that are at Moxy Times Square for our readers to become acquainted with them?
NIKKI MCCUTCHEON: Since opening our doors in September 2017, Magic Hour Rooftop Bar & Lounge at Moxy Times Square is New York City’s largest indoor/outdoor hotel rooftop bar and lounge. Eighteen floors above Manhattan, the space features an “urban amusement park” concept with an adult sensibility and offers epic Empire State Building skyline views. Located downstairs on the second floor of Moxy Times Square, Legasea Seafood Brasserie elevates the seafood dining experience by serving local, sustainable dishes in a modern and vivacious atmosphere. It is my favorite place to go in NYC – the Spicy Crab Beignets are a must have.
AM: Does TAO Group have properties at Moxy Chelsea or Moxy East Village?
NM: Yes! At Moxy Chelsea, TAO Group Hospitality operates Feroce, and the rooftop lounge, The Fleur Room. Over at Moxy East Village we have Cathédrale Restaurant, Alphabet Bar & Cafe, Little Sister Lounge and a new rooftop bar & lounge coming soon! Be sure to follow @TaoGroup on Instagram to stay up to date with all our happenings!
AM: Tell us about Magic Hour in terms of its layout with 3 rooftops and indoor spaces within this urbanized adult playground?
NM: On the East Terrace, we have views of the Empire State Building, the West Terrace has a moving carousel, a pink ombré flower wall with an “Under the Influence” neon sign and Foreplay, our mini putt-putt course with pink bunny statues in provocative poses. We also have the ‘Elephant Room’ which we often use as a private event space that has a full bar and lounge seating.
AM: A number of the spaces have Instagramable moments, how important is that to the guests that are there?
NM: Guests come to Magic Hour Rooftop Bar & Lounge for our multiple Instagramable moments! From the atmosphere with live music and DJs, to the over-the-top menu offerings and risqué décor, everything about Magic Hour is designed to be photographed.
AM: Are hotel guests able to enjoy Magic Hour and can reservations be made here?
NM: Of course! At Magic Hour, we encourage you to make reservations. Reservations can be made by emailing us at MagicHourNYReservations@taogroup.com, online on OpenTable, and for last minute reservations by calling 212-268-0188.
AM: In general, what is the inspiration behind the food and cocktail menu?
NM: We call ourselves an “adult playground” and you will find that our food and cocktail offerings are fun and whimsical.
AM: Can you share information about the Chefs at Magic Hour?
NM: Our amazing food offerings come from Culinary Director Jason Hall and Executive Chef at Moxy Times Square, Anthony Venegas. From opening in 2017, Chef Jason and I wanted the food and cocktail menu to be playful and approachable; we are encouraged to be creative and think outside of the box. For example, our Disco Ball For All cocktail that is served in a spinning disco ball or the Super Stacked Pancakes that are piled almost a foot high.
AM: Are there 3 signature cocktails that you would suggest on our next visit?
NM: Our most popular cocktail, and my personal favorite – the Party Pouch – is a pink, 18 oz. cocktail that comes in a clear pouch, made with Finlandia Grapefruit Vodka, yuzu citrus and a hint of pomegranate. Another great cocktail is the Berry Bubbly with Belvedere Vodka, St. George Raspberry and Domaine Chandon Sparkling Rosé. If you’re looking for a tequila-based cocktail, I always recommend the Float My Boat, which is prepared with Don Julio Blanco tequila, caramelized pineapple and jalapeño syrup.
AM: What are 3 signature dishes that you would suggest for us to enjoy?
NM: One brunch dish I love is our Super Stack Pancakes that comes piled high with maple cotton candy, bananas foster, blueberries and apple compote. For a quick and filling bite, I always recommend to our guests the Carnival Style Hotdog. It is unique to Magic Hour Rooftop Bar & Lounge and can be customizable to add your own toppings, such as a fried egg, bacon relish and mac & cheese, among others. If you’re looking for something sweet, enjoy the 3.5 lb. Giant Ice Cream Sandwich which was supersized for Cardi B.’s album release party and is now an internet sensation. With a 24-hour notice this “in the know” dessert comes with three different layers of flavors of ice cream – strawberry, chocolate and vanilla – and is covered in rainbow sprinkles and served with plenty of napkins!
AM: What kinds of special events or ongoing events are coming up that we should keep an eye out for as we head into the Spring/Summer?
NM: As we head into the Spring/Summer, we are rebranding our weekend brunch with new food and cocktail items. Be sure to follow us on Instagram at @MagicHourNY for all upcoming events and new offerings!
IG @TAOGroup
PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS
Athleisure Mag's cover story was shot by Co-Founder + Celebrity Photographer Paul Farkas, using Canon Mark IV; and selected Canon lenses: EF 50 f/1.2 L, EF 24-70 f/2.8 L II, and EF 70-200 f/2.8 L II.
IG @PVFarkas
STYLE, MAKEUP & HAIR CREDITS
Athleisure Mag's Celeb Fashion Stylist, Co-Founder/Creative + Style Director Kimmie Smith, MUA Bamike Ogunrinu and Hairstylist Lea DeLoy share how Rachel Nichols' look was created for the cover editorial.
LOOK I | OUT & ABOUT STYLE
PG 18 + 21 | PROUD Be Positive Bomber Jacket | PARADISED Always Summer Tank | RUTHIE DAVIS Charlie 20 Flatform Jogger in Black/Glitter | PHARAOUN Night Mandala Cocktail Ring |
LOOK II | ON SET/NEWSROOM STYLE FRONT COVER,
PG 22 - 27 | HALE BOB Tabitha Stretch Satin Dress | LAGOS KSL Cuff Bracelet + KSL Caviar Bracelet | NAGACIA JEWELRY Bamboo Ring | QUPID Alona Peep Toe Bootie |
LOOK III | AFTER WORK STYLE BACK COVER,
PG 28 - 33 | HALE BOB Zoey Embroidery Dress in white/gold dress | KIMMIE VINCENT Ocean Avenue | VIRGINS, SAINTS + ANGELS San Benito Ring | LAGOS Gemstone Skull Bracelets |
SKINCARE | KOH GEN DO Cleansing Spa Water | REBELS AND OUTLAWS Love Potion | TATCHA Luminous Deep Hydration Lifting Mask | TWINMEDIX Pro:Refine Eye Corrector | BELIF The True Cream Moisturizing Bomb |
FOUNDATION + CONCEALER | KEVYN AUCOIN Sensual Skin Enhancer | MAKE UP FOREVER Ultra HD Cream Foundation | CHARLOTTE TILBURY Hollywood Contour Wand | MAC COSMETICS Pro Palette Studio Finish Skin Corrector X 6 |
BLUSH | COZZETTE Infinite Blush Palette |
EYES | VISEART Neutral Matte Eyeshadow Palette + Dark Matte Eyeshadow Palette | ARDELL False Eyelashes Naked #420 | ANASTASIA BEVERLY HILLS Brow Definer #Caramel |
LIPS | RUNWAY ROGUE Lip Gloss in #Charmeleon | PAT MCGRATH LABS Lust: Lip Gloss #Bronze Venus |
HAIR | Misted in THEURGY Out of Body through dry hair before curling to add hold and heat protection | Then added THEURGY Shape Shift Texture throughout roots to create extra added volume and lift | Sprayed in THEURGY Enchantment Mist for high shine and to block out humidity | Finished with a light layer of THEURGY Retrograde Hairspray for a brushable finishing hold |
IG @Shes.Kimmie
Read the March Issue of Athleisure Mag and see Bank Shot with Rachel Nichols in mag.
There are a lot of myths out there about sports injuries. Let's debunk the most common sports injury recovery myths that exist today.
Sports injuries can be painful and frustrating; especially if it stops you from playing your chosen sport for any period of time. You're likely to be keen to get back to doing what you love the most but there are some myths that could hinder your recovery.
Taking your injury recovery day by day and listening to the advice of professionals will ensure you're back to fighting fit as soon as you can be. Here are some injury recovery myths you should avoid.
1. Rest is Best
Of course, rest is important. However, some people believe that nothing but rest will result in a complete recovery. That's far from the truth. In fact, physical therapists will often advise their patients to do daily gentle exercises to encourage recovery.
In order to recover properly, the body needs good blood and oxygen circulation. Nothing encourages good circulation like exercise. Resting every day could prolong the recovery process.
2. Ignore Pain
Everyone is familiar with the phrase, 'no pain, no gain'. To a certain degree, athletes need to push past uncomfortable barriers to improve, especially professional athletes. Pain is the body's way of warning you that you could be pushing it too far.
Pain could result in an injury and playing sport with an injury can lead to further, more serious injuries. If you're in pain while playing a sport, it's best to find out why before pushing your body any further.
3. Stretching Will Prevent Injuries
It's important to warm up by stretching before playing sports and this will decrease your chances of getting injured. However, it doesn't make you invincible. Many people believe that if you feel tightening in your muscles, stretching will stop it.
It may give you temporary relief but stretching tightened muscles could also cause an injury. The tightening may be a warning that you're moving in the wrong way or using your muscles improperly.
4. The Stronger You Are, The Less Likely You'll Get Injured
When searching for how to prevent sport injuries, you may come across the myth that you should build your strength up. Although it's healthy to build your muscle strength up, it won't prevent you from getting an injury.
For example, if you're doing your best to build your abs by doing one hundred sit-ups a day, it won't prevent you from getting a back injury. In addition, if you work your muscles too hard in order to build strength, you may increase the likelihood of injury.
Committing to Your Injury Recovery
If you want to make sure your injury recovery goes smoothly and quickly, it's important to take the advice of professionals. Seeking help from a trained physical therapist will ensure you have everything from exercise regimes to nutritional advice.
If you want to be proactive in your recovery, why not search for food groups or meals that could help your body to heal quickly? You'll find everything from muscle-building smoothies to energy-boosting snacks.
Take a look at more of our posts on staying fit and healthy.
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
Being healthy should be a prerogative of any human. It is not just a trend or a phase; it should be a part of our daily life. As we are creatures of habit, we tend to do things just because it is a part of our daily activities. However, most of us are also programmed to look for pleasure and comfort first.
As this page says, we do not usually want to make an effort to be healthy since it is a lot of work. There are a lot of things that you should be doing, and acts that you need to avoid. Once it becomes a part of our routine though, it starts a path to being better physically and mentally.
There are many ways that we can achieve this state, but there are two general ones. First, you need to eat a balanced diet or meal. The other one is through physical activity. Most people would do your typical gym routines or running exercises to keep their blood pumping. They can be effective, and it is a good way to have some sort of exercise in our lives.
On the other hand, some people prefer a more strenuous type of activity. One of them is through joining a fighting class, and MMA is one of the more popular choices.
Learning Mixed Martial Arts
Mixed martial arts (MMA) can be considered as a combination of different fighting styles. It is also sometimes known as “cage fighting” because it is not as rigid in rules compared to other disciplines. One big example of this freedom is holding and grappling.
Most fighting sports do not condone these types of moves, but you can do it in MMA. Same thing with using elbow attacks, kicks and jumps. It is a bloody contact sport, and its training is almost incomparable with others related to its genre.
If you are still a beginner, it can be an intimidating experience. Most experts would agree that you need to undergo training in other contact sports before you can start with this. For example, it would be best to start with Brazilian jiu-jitsu, taekwondo and/or boxing. These disciplines would be best in preparing you for the world of MMA. Some of the rules might be different, but it is certainly going to be easier for adjustment.
You can also look into blogs that can help you learn more about this sport. With the internet, there are so many articles about this. It can be confusing to read most of them especially if you are just starting with the sport.
One of the ways that you may know that it is a great website for you is through their content. Certain sites cater more to advanced learners as it is full of recommendations regarding techniques and strategies. Sites like https://mmasentinel.com help players know more about the craft and skills needed for it.
Starting From Scratch
If you are looking for a beginner-friendly blog, most of them would include tips and tricks on the equipment to use. You would not need the advanced techniques yet as you are still a beginner. It is also a great starting point for people who are just starting if they have articles about the basics. MMA is not a simple discipline by any means, and it has a lot of nuances that are different from the others. The rules of engaging in it are also different, so you need to know as much as possible.
Watching videos can also be a good way to know more about mixed martial arts. There are a lot of channels on YouTube and other platforms that cater to beginners and experts alike. The International Mixed Martial Arts Federation was founded to create more opportunities for novices to test their skills with other fighters. The Ultimate Fighting Championship has been for almost 27 years now, and it has been catering to professionals and fans alike.
MMA is not an easy sport to learn, but it is also hard to master. However, it can be a great way to flex those muscles and show some moves. Losing weight while gaining strength, speed and flexibility is ust one of the great benefits of learning this discipline. It can also be used as a self-defense tool in clutch situations, but you need to be able to use it properly.
Read the latest issue of Athleisure Mag.
Read the Feb 50th Issue of Athleisure Mag and see 9PLAYLIST Brandi Rhodes in mag.