Director of Steroid Documentary, "Bigger, Stronger,
Faster* Is It Still Cheating If Everyone Is Doing
It?"
"In
America, we define ourselves in the superlative:
we are the biggest, strongest, fastest country in
the world. Is it any wonder that so many of our
athletes take performance-enhancing drugs? Director
Christopher Bell explores America’s win-at-all-cost
philosophy by examining the way his two brothers
became members of the steroid subculture in an effort
to realize their American dream. "
I had the opportunity to interview director
Chris Bell on the eve of the world premiere of "Bigger,
Stronger, Faster" at the Sundance Film Festival
on January 19, 2008. "Bigger, Stronger, Faster"
was one of sixteen films selected in the 2008 Sundance
Film Festival Documentary Competition .
What inspired you to do this film?
I always had the idea to do a film on steroids.
But I was searching for the core thought of the
movie. What is this movie really about? Well, it’s
about steroids. But you can’t just say ‘it’s about
steroids,’ you have to come up with some clever
hook to make the film work. So I’m thinking what
is it really about? Then I saw Senator Joseph Biden
speaking about steroids. He was pounding his fist
on the table at a Congressional hearing saying that
there’s something simply un-American about steroids!
And I thought about it. I’m thinking about my brothers.
I’m thinking that I used steroids; I’ve tried them
before. Are we un-American? Are my brothers and
I un-American? Or is there nothing more American
than doing whatever it takes to be number one in
our country? And that’s the core thought of the
film.
How did popular culture influence your interest
in making this film?
My brothers and I grew up in the 80s as a huge
fans of professional wrestling watching Hulk Hogan,
all these guys that were larger than life and eventually
that would parlay into all the other things we liked,
like Rambo, He-Man, the A-Team, Conan, Rocky, the
Incredible Hulk, anything to do with muscles and
guys beating up other guys. We were three little
boys growing up in upstate New York. Poughkeepsie
is actually where they used to tape WWF wrestling
events for television. We used to go there all the
time with our father. Our father would take us to
the wrestling matches, after we would beg him to
go. I remember that we'd have to get good grades
in order to be able to attend these wrestling matches.
They used to tape them for TV so a lot of times
we would look for ourselves in the crowd in the
background. We were heavily influenced by professional
wrestling and I think in a way all three of us somehow
wanted to be involved in professional wrestling
as kids.
So, was it in this context where you first learned
about anabolic steroids? Did this lead to your disillusionment
with professional wrestling?
What was interesting for me was that wrestling
was kind of a two-fold let down. When I was 5 years
old watching wrestling, I thought when Andre the
Giant body slammed Big John Studd he really did
it and the guys really hated each other. Then I
found out that the Iron Sheik and "Hacksaw" Jim
Duggan, who were archrivals, got caught in a car
smoking pot and doing coke together driving down
the interstate. And when that happened, I realized
wrestling was fake. So, that was my first big disillusionment
with wrestling. These guys didn't really hate each
other. They were actually friends doing drugs and
driving down the highway together.
The second thing was finding out they all did
steroids. I always used to give the guys a benefit
of a doubt even back when I started training at
16 years old. There's no way! Hulk Hogan just wouldn't
do that. He's a real American. He stands for what's
right. Then they go out on these TV shows... All
these wrestlers and athletes alike are using this
common ground excuse "Yeah I did steroids but I
only tried it for a little bit." But anyone in the
know realizes that you don't just get 24-inch pythons
from taking your vitamins.

Which disappointed you the most - the scripted
entertainment or the pervasive use of steroids?
They were equal in a way. Anytime you're disillusioned
and you find out something isn't real - like when
you find out there's no such thing as Santa Claus
- you're disappointed. I feel that anytime you're
let down, you're disappointed. I guess the thing
with learning about steroids was that I was old
enough to understand it. And I did understand it.
But I feel bad for kids nowadays, because steroids
are in the news everyday, and kids who are 5-6 years
old are finding out that their heroes take steroids.
When I was like 17 years old, I was able to handle
it. I said I guess that's just what they did and
it wasn't that big of a deal. I feel for the kids
nowadays who are growing up watching Barry Bonds
and other people. They are just not what they seem
to be.
In a different respect, I also think that steroids
have come a long way. They are a little more openly
talked about. But I'm thinking something like our
film can help people talk about it in a more rational
way. The way I'm talking about [kids finding out
their heroes are not what they seem] sounds like
I'm part of the demonization process, but nothing
could be further from the truth. Yes, I found out
that all my heroes did steroids. But when I learned
more about steroids, I kind of find out that what
my heroes did was not quite as bad as what I thought
as a kid. I was disillusioned with steroids in the
same way I was disillusioned with wrestling being
fake.
In spite of your disillusionment, did you still
want to be like or look like your heroes?
I was a powerlifter but to say that I wasn't
concerned with what I looked like would be... a
lie you know. That is why I got into lifting weights
in the beginning. I was overweight. I was short.
So I was short and fat. And I didn't want to be
short and fat. I wanted to be like my heroes, Hulk
Hogan and these other guys. But I guess after I
started training and learned that other people did
steroids, I was empowered because by the time I
was 19 years old, I was a national level powerlifter
and I was beating everyone without steroids. So
I was like, ‘who needs steroids?’ I don't need them.
But at a certain point, you find out that you can
only go so far before you run into the people who
are really doing the drugs and setting the records.
And once you get to that point you have to say...
You ask yourself, ‘is this something that I want
to continue doing or do I just want to give up?’
Luckily for me, I didn’t have to make that choice,
because it wasn’t a choice for money. I was pursuing
a film making career, so it wasn’t like I was at
a crossroads. Besides, there wasn’t really any money
in powerlifting to be made.
Do you think it is a real choice, a real problem
that confronts teenagers today?
I can see where that could affect a lot of athletes
where they have to make a choice to continue playing
baseball and take steroids or just quit altogether
and quit their dream. And that happens to a lot
of people. It’s a decision that a lot of high school
and college kids face. They might think they are
faced with it earlier than they really are but they
are just not challenging themselves.
That’s why I challenge
kids who are taking steroids
to train with me - without steroids - for 4-6 months
and see how much greater results they obtain with
me. I can almost guarantee you that kids who decide
to take steroids are not training right and they
don’t really need them. That’s how I would tell
kids to stay away from steroids; I think kids need
proper training before they need steroids.
But is it still a shortcut to success for young
athletes?
Steroids can be perceived as a shortcut. I’m
not going to lie. You can take steroids and not
do anything and they are still going to help your
strength. That’s just what they do.
What a lot of kids don’t understand is that you’re
not going to set records by just taking steroids.
You have to have natural ability, you have to train
hard, and you have to eat right. There are many
steps involved.
Kids are able to understand that all steroids
are just synthetic versions of the male sex hormone,
testosterone. And you already have a very high testosterone
level when you’re a teenager. To take steroids at
this age would only shut down that natural production
of testosterone. I think kids see it as a shortcut
but kids don’t really know that they may actually
just be doing more damage than help. We don’t even
have studies for kids, so I can’t even say that
for exact truth. I can just base it on what I know
and what I’ve seen.
Whose responsibility is it to keep steroids away
from kids?
The government has come down and said all these
professional athletes did steroids and they should
all go to jail. But when you look at the facts,
most of these professional athletes are doing anabolic
steroids and growth hormone under the
laws that
Congress has provided us. So if they are bad role
models for doing it, then congress is a bad role
model for setting up the laws the way they did.
I don’t know how you could possibly justify the
fact that people [who are not athletes] can use
human
growth hormone and
testosterone. But if you
are an athlete, all of a sudden, you are a criminal
for some reason. I understand that there are rules
in sports just like any other game. If there weren’t
any rules and just lawlessness it wouldn’t be sports.
What’s interesting is if you’re a professional athlete,
they say you shouldn’t be doing it but they may
actually be the people who need it more than anyone.
And so why should we deprive an athlete of medicine
that we would give in normal every use to other
people? It’s such a grey area.
Is it still cheating?
Like I said if you are playing a sport and steroids
are against the rules flat out you’re cheating.
Its against the rules of your sport. A lot of people
question whether it’s cheating if everyone is doing
it. If it’s against the rules of the sport it is
cheating. If it’s not against the rules of the sport
I don’t see it as cheating. If you look in the IFBB
pro bodybuilding rulebook, there’s no mention of
steroids. So is it cheating to use steroids in bodybuilding?
No, because they don’t mention it. Is it cheating
to use steroids in powerlifting? No, because they
don’t mention it in the rules. It’s not in the rules.
And in baseball. it’s in the rules.
The thing that is interesting about our film
is that I could sit here and argue until I’m blue
in the face for either side. I can say in one respect
it is cheating. And on the hand, the athletes need
it. And that’s what I think makes the movie so interesting.
I wanted to try and get everyone talking about it
so they can formulate and make rational decisions
about steroids rather than just demonize them and
say they are bad.
What happens when we start demonizing
steroids?
What if they are the future of medicine? What
if steroids, human growth hormone, and all these
hormones that we are manipulating… What if that
is the future of how we make people better, how
we make people live longer? And if it is then we’re
demonizing it because people are cheating in sports!
It’s just plain wrong. It’s an important issue…
It’s an important issue in the future discussion
of healthcare in America. If people aren’t getting
sick they aren’t going to the doctor. If drugs like
testosterone,
growth hormone,
estrogen, progesterone,
and all the things we’re giving people to
modulate
their hormones, are helping people live longer,
happier, healthier lives then let’s study that.
Let’s study what good they can do.
Who
exactly is
demonizing them and why?
A lot of athletes themselves give steroids a
bad name. For example, I was talking to a friend
of mine this morning and he was talking about [claims
made by] Tony Mandarich and Lyle Alzado. These are
guys that have no definitive proof that steroids
did anything to them. But they are looking for something
to blame because their career bombed out. They weren’t
strong enough or they weren’t good enough anymore.
And they say, ‘well, I was on a bunch of steroids
and I got off them and now I am like this.’
And so the
demonization – a lot of it comes from
athletes who have taken them. You’ll see some TV
shows... Turn on the Learning Channel and there’s
some idiot bodybuilder saying even one drop of testosterone
in your system will kill you. You have guys saying
stuff like that and I say ‘what are you kidding
me?’ I could inject a whole bottle of testosterone
and show you that I’m not going to drop dead. Everyone
wants to be righteous all of a sudden. They want
to do a ton of steroids, a ton of drugs, and then
they want to get off of them and become righteous.
I see a lot guys like that at Gold Gym right
now who are currently personal trainers. But they
used to be bodybuilders in the 80s and 90s; they
were huge and jacked and walking around at 280 lbs.
Now they’re denouncing steroids, ‘it was a big mistake;
I never should have done that.’ They have fantastic
physiques, they’re ripped and they’re lean. They
may not be on steroids now, but they never would
have gotten to that level without them. They’re
part of the demonization process. People want to
look good but no one wants to be a personal trainer
and have their clients know they are on steroids.
It’s an interesting thing that I face everyday;
people who have used steroids are
demonizing them.
You don’t really get that with other drugs. I’m
not talking about recreational drugs but medicinal
drugs. You don’t have people demonizing medicinal
drugs they have taken and had good results. Yet
you have people who take anabolic steroids and have
these great results and then turn around and say
steroids are bad. It boggles my mind the way people
do that.
This film is obviously more than just a documentary
about steroids. For one, it is a very personal film because
it is about your family.
What is nice about the film is that I really
approached it with an open mind. I have two brothers
and they were both taking steroids while I was making
the film. Not right now but when I was making the
film.
One of my brothers has a wife and a kid. His
wife is pretty happy. My other brother has a battle
with depression, a battle with alcohol and drugs.
He’s married as well but he’s pretty depressed a
lot. He’s also found out that he is bipolar. And
he’s got a lot of problems. So you know steroids
for my older brother, who is having a lot of problems,
might not be the best thing for him. He has problems
with alcohol addiction and painkillers… We have
no idea how steroids and growth hormone would affect
him or if they are good or bad for someone who is
bipolar. Until we know, maybe he shouldn’t be taking
them.
On the other hand, my younger brother, while
I’m not condoning that he uses steroids; he uses
steroids in a way that he seems to stay pretty healthy,
pretty happy. The one thing that I disagree with…
I tell him, and we have arguments all the time.
He just weighs a lot. He weighs 300 lbs. He’s powerlifting.
He squats 1000 lbs; he benches 800 lbs. And you
got to weigh 300 lbs to do that. His normal bodyweight
is probably around 215 or 220. So when you gain
a lot of weight, you also invite a lot of problems,
whether the weight is muscle or fat. You’re just
carrying around too much weight. And that’s one
of the problems with steroids. Excessive weight
gain can pose a danger. But usually excessive weight
gain comes with steroid abuse and not normal steroid
use. It has to do with people using much more than
the prescribed amount.

How difficult was it for you to film a documentary
about issues confronting your family?
The funny thing is that when people look at this
film, they see it’s about my family, they say ‘oh
my god how did you do that?’ How could you turn
the camera on your family? To me, in a way it was
really easy, and in a way it was really difficult.
It was actually easier to get them to cooperate;
my family is very supportive. They know that I’ve
wanted to make films for years and years and they
know that I’ve been trying really hard to get my
stuff made and raise money. So my family’s agreement
to be in the movie was really easy.
But what happened was as soon as I started asking
the questions it became much more difficult. When
I started asking my younger brother questions, his
wife was concerned. She really didn’t know what
the movie was about and I guess they didn’t discuss
it too much beforehand. But then she would overhear
my interview with him and hear him talking about
his steroid use.
"Oh my god, what is this movie about?" she started
to break down and cry, "There’s no way! He’s going
to lose his job. He’s going to lose this he’s going
to lose that." I had to have a conversation with
her and reassure her and explain the way that I
was presenting the movie. I’m presenting it in a
way that people will understand it.
She said, "You know what Chris I understand that
but this could go either way. Your movie could be
something that no one ever sees. And it could ruin
your brother’s career. Or it could be something
that everyone sees but it could still ruin his career!
I don’t see anything positive coming out of it."
I asked her what would make a difference, what
would make it positive. She actually said the thing
that would change her mind is if she could speak
on camera about him and explain to the world that
her husband is not a bad guy because of using steroids.
And explain what he does with the kids, how he works
with high school kids, how he does all these wonderful
things.
You know what, that was amazing. She talks about
this in the movie. She’s one of everyone’s favorite
characters in the movie. She’s just rational. She’s
not the nagging wife. She’s the one that says, ‘I’ve
looked into this, I’ve researched this, I know what
he’s doing, and there are certain rules of the game
and he’s playing by the rules of their game.’ The
one thing that she does worry about is that it is
illegal. In that respect, he has to figure out how
to get it legally or he can’t do it. That kind of
deal. But you know, getting it legally – it’s really
sad – getting it legally it just costs a lot more
money, that’s all. It’s not like its any better.
You’re never guaranteed quality with anything.
Do you think that anabolic steroids represent
a public health crisis? How dangerous are steroids?
The drugs themselves have been shown to be fairly
safe. What’s funny about steroids is that we try
to lump them together as one big thing. But you
know as well as I do that there are over 200 different
types of steroids. You have
Anadrol,
Anavar,
Winstrol,
Dianabol,
Primobolan, blah, blah, blah – the list
goes on and on. And so you can’t say that
Halotestin
and Anavar – which are two oral steroids – are the
same. They are not. It’s like comparing cocaine
to
ephedrine. They kind of do the same thing. But
they’re not the same. You have one drug that is
pretty mild like
Anavar and you have another drug
that is very liver toxic like
Halotestin that could
also produce a helluva lot of strength gains.
We definitely have to stop lumping all the steroids
together. When we hear that this guy had all these
side effects from steroids, but do we know what
was he taking? Then you find out he was taking the
ones that are considered more dangerous. If we ever
start really researching steroids – who takes what
and whatever – we can learn if there are drugs that
are too dangerous. Is
Anadrol too dangerous? Is
Halotestin too
liver toxic?
That also presents another question. In America
we are allowed to do a lot of things that can hurt
us. We are allowed to bungee jump, we are allowed
to black diamond ski, we are allowed to get plastic
surgery. I can get fake breasts put in as a man
or a woman. I can get buttock augmentation. I can
get my lips done. My nose done. My ears done. Whatever
I want in order to look good. But if I want to ingest
steroids to look good, then that becomes illegal.
Steroids are totally different recreational drugs.
If I’m going to take a hit of a joint, drink a bottle
of wine, smoke a cigarette. Those things are done
recreationally to get me to a certain point where
I’m happy and whatever. It’s ok to do those things
if you’re not happy. But if you’re not happy and
you’re unhappy with the way you look, you’re not
allowed to take steroids. But you’re allowed to
have the flesh sucked out of you. I just think this
steroid issue presents a much bigger question than
we ever thought. The more you look into the more
you realize that there is a lot of stuff here.
Any drug has dangers. Any supplement can have
adverse effects. We live in a country where if something
is naturally found in the food supply and not illegal,
you can make it into a dietary supplement. And dietary
supplements are totally unregulated so you don’t
know what adverse effects you will have from those.
You don’t know what adverse effects you’ll have
from taking aspirin or any drug. So to lump steroids
into being as dangerous as Special K which is a
drug that has killed a lot of people by shutting
down their whole system, is ridiculous. That’s in
the same category as steroids. For a drug like that
that can kill you in one dose to be lumped in with
steroids that are enhancing athletes performance…
And athletes are the ones taking steroids; it’s
not bums on the street injecting each other with
steroids and beating people up; that’s not why people
are taking steroids.
It’s not like a victim drug, it’s not like cocaine
where people do coke and do something they might
not normally do. Steroids and marijuana are pretty
similar in that they are the kind of drugs that
are demonized and maybe they shouldn’t be. Marijuana
has medical uses but in reality most people use
it to kind of chill out and relax. If that’s going
to help someone chill out and relax, why aren’t
we allowed to do that? And why aren’t we allowed
to make ourselves look better if we want to look
better? We’re still allowed to drink all the alcohol
we want…
Its one of those things that kind of crosses
the line. Is it one of those government things,
like a sort of conspiracy thing. I don’t want to
sound like a conspiracy theorist. You’re allowed
to drink alcohol but not to smoke pot. One comes
from the ground and the other is manmade. It’s interesting
how we decide what is legal and what is illegal.
How many people did you interview in the course
of making this film?
I probably interviewed over 200 people. It’s
great to be able to go from talking with my family
about steroids… I go from asking my brother if he
thinks using steroids is cheating. And then I go
to talking to Ben Johnson and Carl Lewis! It’s a
very interesting film that travels a vast expanse.
I talk to Floyd Landis. I talk to Stan Lee – who
is from Marvel Comics - who invented a lot of the
larger than life
comic book superheroes that we
see that are all muscular! I interviewed him about
that – it is pretty interesting.
Do the interviewees cover both ends of the spectrum
from anti-steroid to pro-steroid?
I wanted to make sure we got the people who are
anti-steroid. Like Donald Hooton, Donald Hooton
son’s committed
suicide and he blames steroids.
So I wanted to find out why he was convinced his
son’s death was due to steroids. I just leave it
up to the audience to make their own decision. I
just ask the right questions and hopefully the audience
can figure it out. I don’t try to say this is right
or wrong or good or bad.
Which interviews had the greatest influence on
you as a filmmaker?
The biggest effect on me was probably Donald
Hooton because Donald Hooton affected me emotionally,
on an emotional level. I now understand why the
things that happened in Congress with Mr. Hooton
happened. He really appeals on an emotional level
where he gets you thinking well maybe… This poor
guy he lost his kid. He really attacks you on an
emotional level. But you really have to stop and
think, is it real, that is is the emotion
reality or is
it just what he’s telling me? Is he just telling
me
his kid took steroids and died or did it really
happen like that.
I also interviewed Gary Wadler. And Dick Pound.
Those guys are pretty interesting. They are interesting
in their own way. They have really strong opinions
and I think they … Dick Pound just makes sense –
he’s just there to enforce the law. These things
are illegal in our sport. And he’s going to enforce
the law. He’s pretty hardcore about but he’s pretty
straightforward. He says, ‘look guys steroids are
against the law, they’re against our sport and I’m
not going to let anyone take them.’ And that’s his
stance. I think he goes a little bit far trying
to dig into people’s past records and he kind of
does a Gestapo approach to it. But that’s why he’s
there. He’s there to be an anti-doping guy.
And Gary Wadler, I don’t know what his agenda
is. I think his agenda might just be to get on television.
I really don’t understand it. I don’t understand
why he is so anti-steroid. He doesn’t really have
any proof.
Which pro-steroid interviewees influenced you
the most?
My own brothers. And
John Romano. I think Romano
is more anti-hypocrisy than pro-steroids; he just
doesn’t think steroids are that bad. So Romano was
a great guy to talk to.
Rick Collins was a great
guy to talk to. He talks about it from a true legal
standpoint. He does a very good job explaining why
steroids became
illegal.
Which interviews do you think the audience will
find the most interesting?
I think some of the most interesting interviews
are the ones where I (the filmmaker) was challenged.
I think Donald Hooton was one of the hardest
interviews to do.
I also interviewed Henry Waxman who is a Congressman
from California. Waxman called all the
baseball
hearings. So I go into someone’s office who is a
congressman and I’m a 33-year old kid at the time
and I’m walking into his office. I’m feeling like,
"Oh shit I really did it this time, I’m really stepping
in shit here; what if this goes wrong what if this
goes bad. I’m going to look terrible. I’m really
nervous. This guy is going to know it all – he’s
going to have all the facts down, he’s going to
be a politician, boom, boom, boom!"
But when I realized after the first or second
question that he really didn’t know what he was
talking about, then it was game on. It kind of became
fun. Ok, let me ask him the really hard questions.
And on every single question, he stumbled on. It’s
interesting they’re going to have another congressional
hearing into steroids in baseball and Henry Waxman
is the guy who’s calling these hearings; it’s going
to be interesting what people who see the film are
going to think about him in the hearings. He really
does not come off well in the film. He really doesn’t
have an idea as to why he’s pressing this issue.
The only reason he is pressing the issue is he knows
in his heart that steroids are illegal and he doesn’t
want your kids to get them. The idea of being the
politician who saves the children it always looks
good.
Does the ignorance about steroids in an influential
lawmaker concern you?
It doesn’t concern me in the fact… Well, yes
of course it concerns me anytime you see something
like that going on. You know, what if they are that
dumb about Iraq? And about terrorism? And about
things that could really affect our lives every
day? So, it does concern me to see them not be able
to figure out how to legislate things. But it was
enlightening in a way. I always thought these congressmen
were so perfect. It was interesting to see them
in a different light. But it is good to see that
they don’t know everything especially when you’re
dealing with politics and the upcoming election.
It makes you think twice about politicians. What
do they really know? Are they really just controlled
by what they are told? Is it something that someone
just comes in and hands them a piece of paper and
says here is your briefing today, steroids are bad.
So now that I know this as a voter, I feel a little
bit more empowered. These people are not perfect.
What do they know and what do they not know? And
going into a big election it was enlightening to
know that they are not all perfect, they’re not
all geniuses.
How do you feel about the most high-profile politician
to have admitted using steroids –
Arnold Schwarzenegger?
Arnold is an American hero. He’s a great success
story. He can be an inspiration to anyone. He’s
someone I’ve looked up to my whole life. What I
don’t like about Arnold – I can honestly say and
I’d say it to his face if I could talk to him… Maybe
it’s political pressure, maybe its not even the
guys fault... But he’s on all these television talk
shows and he’s saying we really need to do something
about the drug testing in sports. He says it’s bad
for the children and it sends the wrong message
to the kids.
But then I turn the channel to the Arnold Classic
where he’s handing Victor Martinez the trophy. He’s
saying look at this guy - he’s so big, he’s so ripped,
I’m so proud of him. He’s handing him the trophy
but they didn’t test
Victor Martinez [for steroids].
And beyond not testing Victor Martinez, he was implicated
in a steroid scandal through one of these compounding
pharmacies the day before he won the Arnold Classic.
So here you have a guy who’s implicated in a steroid
case, who got caught selling steroids to an undercover
cop three years ago, he has done jail time for it
and now he’s winning the Arnold Classic with Arnold
is handing him the trophy. But in another interview,
Arnold is saying we need to crack down on the [steroid]
testing. I don’t understand that. I don’t understand
what…
If Arnold wants to play both sides of the coin
like that, it’s ok, but just don’t be surprised
when someone calls you out on that. I basically
call him out on that in the movie. I would love
for Arnold to just stand up and say ‘hey look I
did steroids and this is what it did for me - both
good and bad.’ Just let me know. Talk to us. You’re
the guy who did it. You did it for a long time.
Now you’re in a position of power where you can
speak about it. And speak about it honestly, honestly
and openly.
I don’t want to hear what Governor Schwarzenegger
has to say about it. I want to hear what Arnold
has to say about it. Arnold the bodybuilder. Arnold
who did it to enhance his performance and win competitions.
Did he really start when he was 15 or 16 like they
say? I don’t know. We don’t know enough about [his
steroid use] and he’s not come forward and talked
about it. I can also understand the heat that he
gets. But is it any worse than the president we
have now [who allegedly did] cocaine, I don’t think
so. George Bush was an alcoholic before he became
president; the list goes on and on. Is it something
we should really come down on Arnold for? I just
wish, like any other politician, someone would take
a stand and have some balls and say what they really
mean. Because I think if Arnold said what he really
means about steroids. I would just like to hear
him speak as himself. I don’t want to hear this
slanted political view of the world as written by
one of his assistants.
Given your experiences with politicians, do you
think Congress should regulate steroids in sports?
I don’t think congress should be involved regulating
steroids in sports at all. I think they waste a
lot of money. The Mitchell Report tells who used
steroids or who may have used steroids. And where
does that get us? It doesn’t really get us anywhere
as a culture. They spend $20 million on the Mitchell
Report. If you spend $10 at your local cinema and
go see our movie, you’ll understand why people take
steroids, and why people want to enhance their performance.
We live in a society of bigger, stronger, faster.
We live in a society of ‘if you’re not the best,
you’re nothing.’ And so when congress is looking
at all these guys asking if Roger Clemens really
did it, did he juice? Who really cares? Why did
he juice? Why is he doing this? Why are our kids
doing this? How does this affect us? Is it even
dangerous? Let’s look at that? Is it dangerous?
Is it bad? Is there any good in steroids? Do we
stop it if it’s not that dangerous? How do we make
it so it is regulated? [We need to ask these questions]
and we’re not doing that!
The question shouldn’t be who? It should be why?
And how do we fix it? I asked a lot of people. Do
we even have a steroid problem? Or is this a much
bigger ethical problem?
I think most people will agree that we have a
huge ethical problem in this country where people
are willing to do whatever it takes to win. They
will do whatever it is to get ahead. And if it’s
not steroids, it’s something else.
If you look at the U.S. Air Force, we’re the
only air force in the world that allows our pilots
to fly – not only allows, but actually requires
– that our
fighter pilots fly with amphetamines
in their airplane. They have to have amphetamines
in their airplanes! Otherwise they are not allowed
to take off. The reason for this requirement is
that they are flying over Iraq on eight hour trips.
They’re definitely going to get tired and you can’t
really pull over when you’re up in the air. Our
country gives "greenies," the same thing they are
coming down on baseball players for using… They’re
giving fighter pilots amphetamines so they can go
fight a war! But when an athlete takes it, it is
really, really wrong!
So you’re living in a country that allows these
things to happen. There are 5-1/2 million adolescent
prescriptions for Adderall. Adderall is a stimulant
that is very close to cocaine. And we’re giving
it to kids because they can’t concentrate in class.
And other kids are finding or stealing or buying
from the kids who have prescriptions.
There actually is a condition where kids do need
it but it’s not 5-1/2 million kids. There is a very
small percentage of these kids who actually need
it. And usually the kids who actually need it don’t
want to take it and give or sell it to the other
kids. So we basically have a whole country of kids
taking speed so they can study better! I think we
have a much bigger ethical problem that extends
beyond steroids!
What should we do about the use of steroids?
Should we regulate? Should we legalize it? Should
we allow steroid use only under a doctor’s supervision?
I don’t know. I say that. But in practice that
sounds good. But when you think about it, we don’t
have doctor-prescribed alcohol use that tells us
‘how much vodka can you drink." If I give you a
bottle of aspirin are you going to take the whole
thing? No, you’re going to take 1-2 and get rid
of your headache. So I don’t understand why we think
we have to regulate steroids. I don’t even know
that we do. It sound good to me in general; it is
smarter to always consult a doctor when you are
taking any drug. But does it have to be like that?
Not really, it’s just a matter of …
It would really be interesting to see what would
happen if they made steroids legal. What would really
happen?
In making the movie, I went down to Guadalajara
Mexico and walked into a shopping mall and bought
steroids with John Romano. We walked in and we bought
a Sustanon redi-ject. I looked at it and I walked
out and I had it sitting out in plain view. There
are little kids running around. I said this is really
weird. This would not happen in America. And I’m
looking around at the guys and none of the guys
are walking around jacked. People don’t care. People
down there don’t even know. If steroids were made
legal what kind of problem would we have in America.
How would it be different than Mexico. It would
just be interesting to see. I don’t think it would
ever happen. What is the difference in mentality?
In Mexico, they are very family oriented and
very job oriented. It’s all about making enough
money to take care of your family. Money is power
and status. And family is status. And here [in the
United States], it is very much more of an individualistic
society where it is about me, me, me. How much do
‘I’ make? China is the same way as far as steroids
are concerned. You can get any steroid in china.
And pretty much every steroid you buy gets the raw
materials from China. But you don’t see people all
jacked up there either on the street or in the gyms
in China; it’s not what they’re about.
Who especially should see "Bigger Stronger
Faster?"
I think high school and college athletes definitely
need to see my film. And I hope that high school
and college athletes would watch it with their parents.
It is a very family friendly film; my whole family
is in it. And I think that if people can see and
understand…
You’d love to tell kids hey don’t do it. Don’t
try this. And I’ve tried steroids in my life. But
I never tried them until I was 26 years old. So
to tell a kid hey stay away from something you did
is always hard but I never did it as a kid. I feel
we just don’t know what lies in store with a kid
who is messing with their hormones at that age.
And to me personally I don’t think kids should
take any drugs unless they have a bad cough and
need some penicillin or something. They’re young.
They shouldn’t be on Adderall, Ritalin, and all
these other things parents and doctors have kids
on nowadays. I just don’t think they need it.
I think kids need to see [the film]. And hopefully
kids will be able to watch it with their parents
and talk about steroids openly and rationally.
Chris, thank you and good luck at Sundance!
Thank you.
About Christopher Bell
Christopher Bell grew up in Poughkeepsie, New
York, where his relationship with both filmmaking
and bodybuilding began in his teens. After graduating
from USC’s School of Cinematic Arts in 1995, Bell
wrote, directed, and produced the anti-smoking short
film Billy Jones, which screened at the AFI Film
Fest, HBO Comedy Festival, and Palm Springs International
Festival of Short Films and earned him a best director
award at the New Orleans Film Festival. He has also
won bench-pressing competitions, including the California
State Powerlifting Championship.
Bigger, Stronger,
Faster* is his first documentary feature.
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