This Past Weekend - #587 - Arnold Schwarzenegger
Episode Date: June 5, 2025Arnold Schwarzenegger is an actor, bodybuilding legend, best-selling author, entrepreneur and former Governor of California. Season 2 of his show ‘Fubar’ premieres on Netflix June 12th. Arnold in...vites Theo to his office to talk about leaving Austria to turn his American dream into a reality, what he learned about politics when he was Governor of California, and why a mindset is all you need to succeed at your goals. Arnold Schwarzenegger: https://www.instagram.com/schwarzenegger/ ------------------------------------------------ Tour Dates! https://theovon.com/tour New Merch: https://www.theovonstore.com ------------------------------------------------- Sponsored By: Celsius: Go to the Celsius Amazon store to check out all of their flavors. #CELSIUSBrandPartner #CELSIUSLiveFit https://amzn.to/3HbAtPJ DraftKings: Pick 6 from DraftKings is the most fun way to play fantasy sports. Download the DraftKings Pick Six app NOW and use code THEO. That’s code THEO for new customers to play $5, get $50 in bonus picks. Better payouts. Bigger wins. Only with Pick6 from DraftKings. The Crown is yours. https://draftkings.com ". Moonpay: Head over to https://www.moonpay.com/theo to sign up Oracle: Go to http://oracle.com/THEO to try OCI for free. ------------------------------------------------- Gambling Problem? Call one eight hundred gambler. Help is available for problem gambling. Call eight eight eight seven eight nine seven seven seven seven, or visit c c p g dot org in Connecticut. Must be eighteen plus, age and eligibility restrictions vary by jurisdiction. Pick6 not available everywhere, including New York and Ontario. Void where prohibited. One per new customer. Bonus awarded as non-withdrawable Pick Six Bonus Picks that expire in fourteen days. Limited time offer. Terms at pick six dot draftkings dot com slash promos. ------------------------------------------------- Music: “Shine” by Bishop Gunn Bishop Gunn - Shine ------------------------------------------------ Submit your funny videos, TikToks, questions and topics you'd like to hear on the podcast to: tpwproducer@gmail.com Hit the Hotline: 985-664-9503 Video Hotline for Theo Upload here: https://www.theovon.com/fan-upload Send mail to: This Past Weekend 1906 Glen Echo Rd PO Box #159359 Nashville, TN 37215 ------------------------------------------------ Find Theo: Website: https://theovon.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/theovon Facebook: https://facebook.com/theovon Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thispastweekend Twitter: https://twitter.com/theovon YouTube: https://youtube.com/theovon Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheoVonClips Shorts Channel: https://bit.ly/3ClUj8z ------------------------------------------------ Producer: Zach https://www.instagram.com/zachdpowers Producer: Trevyn https://www.instagram.com/trevyn.s/ Producer: Nick https://www.instagram.com/realnickdavis/ Producer: Colin https://www.instagram.com/colin_reiner/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today's guest is a legendary actor, bodybuilder,
tastemaker, really in the world of bodybuilding.
He was the governor of California.
When you think of the American dream, he is pretty much it.
The second season of his Netflix show,
FUBAR is dropping soon, we're gonna talk about that.
And a lot more, I'm honored to sit down with the one and only Mr. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
So where do you work out of? I live in Nashville, Tennessee now.
Tennessee.
I lived here for about 12 years.
That's a growing city now, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's growing fast because it's safe.
You can have a weapon if you need to.
I think there's that semblance of you can take care of yourself type of energy. Right. And so, and it's a friendly
community and it's very safe, you know, it's like a lot of cities some of them
get kind of dangerous. It's known for its country music, right? Yeah. Did you ever
listen to country music growing up? Yeah, I mean, you know, the 50s rock and roll.
Did they have any, because you grew up in Austria, right?
Or till what age?
Austria, yeah.
I was in Austria until I was 19.
And so we were, there was a program that was called Hit Parade and the Hit Parade.
A television show?
No, no, we didn't have television.
So we just had the radio at home.
But I had then bought, I was like 15 and I just bought my first transistor radio.
Yeah.
In a little plastic box, right? And I paid off like 50 shilling a month
until it was paid off a year later.
But then that always took down to the lake where I grew up
that we were sitting around with the boys from a village.
And we were listening to this hit parade.
It was from seven to eight at night on Wednesdays.
And there was like Little Richard and Chuck Berry
and all of those guys that were, you know, big
in the 50s and 60s exactly.
And so I grew up with that.
And that's why I have that station
in my radio 50s at all times.
Oh, so you still listen to it.
It just listening.
I just love it, right?
Then when I came over here,
I became aware of a little bit of the country, Western kind of music.
Did you go to a concert in Austria? Was there a concert you ever went to before you came here?
No, no. I never afforded a concert. Are you kidding me? I had no money. But I mean, when I came over here, I then became aware of the country western songs, especially Johnny Cash.
He did a television show, a weekly television show.
And it was great, great music.
So I fell in love with that.
And then friends of mine here in America then took me to concerts.
You know, it was like a jazz concert or a country-western concert and all of this stuff.
And that's when I started really getting into it.
But I mean, I loved the music.
But the minute you grow up in Austria, the most of the stuff that you hear is really Austrian music.
You know, the Umpel, La Umpel, Adel, and all this kind of thing.
Is it beautiful music?
Beautiful music.
But I mean, that's what you hear on public radio and public television
also.
That's what you see.
And you see operas and you hear concerts.
My father himself was a musician.
He played six instruments.
Six instruments?
Yes.
Six instruments.
All kind of like fliegelhorn, trumpet, saxophone, clarinet, all of the stuff like that.
A lot of traditional music he would play?
Yeah, very traditional because he was the conductor of the Chantamarie music, which
is the police, the country police, like the sheriffs.
Chantamarie it's called?
Yeah, Chantamarie is a French word, Chandam.
And so he was a Chandam, he was a police officer.
And so he played in that Shandamari music.
Would he play at home or where would he play?
He practiced at home.
You know, while I was training, I remember,
I was doing my workouts and he would be standing,
the window would be open up at our house
and he would be kind of playing out
to the window, out the window.
And there was a kid that was my age
that lived 150 yards away from us.
He was one of my best friends.
And he also learned how to play the trumpet
at the age of like 13 or 14.
So he would play over there and then
my dad would play over here and they were going back and forth like that. It was really
fun. Like a couple of birds almost. Yeah, but I never for some reason or the other,
my dad always wanted me to get into music. Not as a professional, but I mean-
Did you try it at all? Yeah, I tried it. It just didn't work.
What instrument? Well, he tried the trumpet, obviously.
Then he thought that he can seduce me kind of into the music
because I liked Elvis. So he said,
well, why don't you learn how to play the guitar?
I don't play the guitar.
I says, but there's a farmer that is a hundred yards up the road.
He plays the guitar and he can teach it. So I was a teacher.
And so I would go to him, but it just, you know, I just could see right away that that was not meant for me.
Was there a lot of like, when you were a child in Austria, was there a lot of like individualism or was it, were things very like regimented?
Like in America, you could like, you can be an individual, right?
But some countries, it's a little bit harder to kind of like, you know, be an individual and have a voice. I'm just wondering what was it
like there when you were young? Did it feel like things were regimented or it was okay to be
rebellious? What was it like there? Well, I was rebellious in the way because I mean, think about
it, soccer and track and field, they were kind of like the in sports but when I was exposed to
weightlifting and to powerlifting and to bodybuilding I fell in love with that and also because my heroes
like Reg Park and Steve Reeves they were doing Hercules movies and I just started looking at
those movies right and so I said I want to be like that.
I don't want to be a top soccer player.
I want to be like that.
I want to have some muscles like that.
And I want to get into movies like that.
And so that always then became my dream.
So you really want it to be like this.
Yeah.
So I was fixated.
It was like kind of like concentrating I was kind of concentrating,
that I kind of put visually my head
on Reg Park's body and I said to myself,
there was a picture, a famous picture,
where he won the Mr. Universe contest in London in 1951.
And when I saw that picture, it was like
him holding the trophy and flexing his bicep. And then I saw that picture, it was like him holding the trophy and flexing his bicep.
And then I said to myself, can you imagine if this is me?
I'm going to make this me.
And so that's what I was training for.
So my parents thought that it was kind of, what is that all about?
Where did that come from?
And the whole neighborhood was kind of like,
wondering what is this guy doing training
every day, two hours, three hours a day?
I came home and instead of having lunch, I would put my sit-up board up on the kitchen
table and I would be doing sit-ups, 500 sit-ups during lunch.
You were addicted to it.
You were totally addicted.
Because I was driven by my vision.
You know, so It was always there. Even when I was in school,
I would sometimes just wander off when the teacher was teaching out there, writing up something on
the blackboard. And I would be looking at that and then all of a sudden he could see that I was just
kind of like staring off. And then all of a sudden he threw a chalk at my head and I looked back again
and he says, Arnold, I'm up here. I mean, I know you're looking at the beautiful trees
out there. They're more beautiful maybe than me, but you got to listen to what I'm saying.
So I noticed I was always kind of drifting off and visualizing my dreams, always visualizing my dreams, being
on that stage, the Mr. Universe contest, doing maybe Hercules movies, going to America and
all of that.
So it was very different.
So that was not the norm.
So I did step out of the norm and then because everyone else was talking about, oh, I'm going
to go and get a job with the government because I want to make sure that I collect my pension
when I was 65 and all this.
I had no interest in any of that pension.
I mean, what are we talking about?
The age of 18, we start talking about pensions.
I mean, it's crazy, right?
But that's the European way.
Everyone looks for stability,
especially in those times
where government was really ruling.
So then that's also, I think, an explanation of why when I came over here to America in 1968
and I saw Hubert Humphrey and Nixon campaigning.
He was the vice president under Johnson.
Okay.
And so he was campaigning to become... After Kennedy?
Well, Johnson was after Kennedy.
Then he was, Humphrey was his vice president.
So he was running for president.
Oh, yeah.
Looks like he eats gumdrops, that guy.
And so it was really interesting when I listened to the debates,
and I didn't understand maybe three-quarter of it.
But I had a friend that spoke German
and he translated for me.
And when I heard of what Nixon said,
it was so opposite of what I grew up with,
which I didn't like.
The government was in kind of in charge of everything.
In Austria?
In Austria, yeah, exactly.
And so I was in Germany and in all those countries
over there in Europe, socialism
was the system that I grew up in.
So when Nixon spoke, I felt like, wow, get government off your back.
Get the government off your back.
That sounds great.
Wow.
And lowering the taxes, strong military, strong police force, strong, strong economy.
Let the people be free.
Let them shop all around the world and blah, blah, blah.
I said, this is like unbelievable.
And then when Humphrey spoke, it was like I was back in Austria.
You know, so then I said to myself, what are the parties here?
Because they didn't understand really the parties here.
Why?
What was it about Humphreys that made it feel like you're back in Austria?
Well, I said government is the solution.
Oh, I see.
So he was more like the cage.
We all know that the government is not the solution.
I mean, it's like the free enterprise, the economy and all this.
You got to let people be free and not be controlled by government.
Government is good, but you have to find kind of the middle ground of all this, you got to let people be free, and not be controlled by government. Government is good, but you have to find
kind of the middle ground of all this stuff.
Yeah, you can't, if you rely solely on the government
for your life, then you'll just be a,
you'll be a part of the government, basically.
Well, and you become a vegetable.
Yeah.
Because you create a safety net,
then you don't have the will
to really kind of make it on your own.
So what the big advantage of coming to America was,
that there was no safety net. So I was on my own. So what the big advantage of coming to America was that there was no safety net.
So I was on my own. So I had to get really creative. Okay, how can I go and go to school
and educate myself? How can I go and get more English classes? How can I go to Santa Monica
City College and at the same time work and at the same time train five hours a day and do all of
those kinds of things.
So this is, but it was up to me now to be successful,
not up to the government.
So the government was providing the opportunities
and orders, the structure, but that is what I enjoyed.
And so this is why I became kind of like a Nixon Republican
and people always were kind of like,
especially in California, which is a much more liberal state.
So I really enjoyed it. Nixon, of course, came from California.
Question, Arnold. Was it scary to tell your parents that to leave Austria? Did people do that at the
time? I'm just a little bit curious on what it was like to say, I'm leaving here and I'm going to go
to America. Was it even a popular path for people to go?
Well, remember, I started saying this when I was 10.
I see. So it had been, I started saying this when I was 10. Oh, I see.
So it had been, your parents knew it was in your head.
Yeah, exactly.
So I saw a documentary, a black and white documentary in the school.
They showed always those films with this eight millimeter, those whatever films on the little
screen.
And like I said, television was not the common thing at that time in Austria.
So we didn't grow up with that. But they showed the film and I saw a documentary about America.
Now I see the Empire State Building. I said, wait a minute, this building is like
you know a hundred times taller than any of the buildings in Graz where I grew up,
right, in Austria.
And then I saw the Golden Gate Bridge,
then I saw the Pacific Coast Highway.
I saw all of this kind of, you know, great, great things.
I saw the six lane highways.
I saw the big Cadillacs, you know,
with the big fins sticking out, you know.
And so I said to myself,
and then we had all this little kind of cars
and Muscle Beach and all of this stuff that they did in Hollywood.
And so I said, I got to go to America. I got to go to America.
Austria is not the place. It was almost kind of like that my gene was over here.
You know, so it kind of, I gravitated towards America.
Not that they hated Austria, but they just wanted to leave and go do something different.
So my parents always saw me as being different.
So it was not a surprise to them that I wanted to go as soon as I was through with high school
and trade school, that I want to go into the military.
So I went into the military because after you go and serve in the military, then you
can get your passport and you can travel.
So you had to go to the military to get your passport in Austria?
That's right, yeah.
Is it still that way?
No, I don't think it's different now.
Everything is different because everything has changed.
Yeah, and you had a brother as well, right?
Did he go to the military?
He was in the military.
And the year before, he was a year older.
Oh, cool.
What's his name?
He was a year Meinhard.
Meinhard.
Meinhard, exactly.
So he was a year earlier, but he passed away as you know.
I didn't know it.
Yeah, at the age of 24.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Passed away, yeah.
That's him right there?
Yeah. No, this is Franz Dichtinger. He was my training partner in Munich. So after the
army, the Austrian army, I immediately left to go to Munich because I got
an offer because now at that meantime I became the European champion in bodybuilding in the junior
division. Okay, so you go through the military. So yeah, so I became this while I was in the military,
I won this title, you know, best built men of Europe. I was 18 years old. So now I get this offer in Munich.
It's the biggest gym to go and become a trainer.
So I said, okay, I'm going to serve out my term here, get out of here a year later.
And then I go to Munich and I become a trainer there.
Now then I can train anytime, 24 hours a day, because I actually lived in the gym.
So I could get up, literally,
if I wake up at three in the morning,
and you know, I can, let's say, I can fall back to sleep,
I go out to the gym.
How did you live in there?
Like where, they just had a bed in the side or something?
Exactly, it was a little room.
There was from here to there where you would sit,
and a bed, and just a little kind of a thing with cabinet with drawers.
I put my stuff in.
That was it.
That was it.
And then I walked out of it.
It used to be an office there for the gym and I just moved in there
because I had no money.
And you were like, this is what I do all the time.
Anyway, this is like, yeah.
So I was, I was in heaven.
Yeah.
Are you kidding me?
I mean, I went out there, turned on the lights and I was posing with the
old overhead lights and I was posing with the overhead lights
and I was posing in the mirror all the time.
At night I would wake up and I would go out there posing and stuff.
So I was like, you know, very intense and very passionate about bodybuilding and perfecting
my body and going to London, to that very same contest that Reg Park won the Mr. Universe. And that very same year when I went out to Munich, 1966,
I became now Mr. Europe literally two months later.
And then best build man of Europe.
And then I went to the Mr. Universe contest
with the age of 19.
I was the youngest competitor and I came second.
And where was that held at?
It was in London, the same stage as Reg Park won.
So you still hadn't made it to the U.S. yet?
No, no, not yet.
And was your brother also lifting weights? Was he a weightlifter?
No, he was not interested in that.
He was much more, I think, academic, I would say.
Because he read a lot and he studied a lot. He was really good in school.
I was not that good in school.
Yeah.
Did you guys get along pretty well? Is that him or no? That's him. Yeah, that's mine. Oh, that's a cool. What is mine?
Mine hot. Yeah, mine. Yeah. I just wonder what it would be like because I have a brother too. So,
I'm just thinking sometimes like it would be, um, yeah, I just think about my brother a lot. So,
I guess I was just curious what it was like. Um, what your brother was like. Well, he was different
than me, but we did hang out together.
He did come to the gym every so often,
and he worked out with me, but he was not into it.
He wasn't passionate.
He is naturally, he had a better body than I had, actually.
Oh, really?
Yeah, he had a really V-shaped body,
had wide shoulders, a very, very small waist.
God, they always give it to the person that doesn't want it.
I know.
Yeah, we had a guy like that.
But that's, I think, what is interesting about it is that you
struggle much more in the beginning and to catch up and then all of a sudden, you know, you see
your own potential. Yeah. You know, we just see it in the beginning. But then, I mean, I think it was
like going to the gym was my first time where I got compliments. Because my parents weren't into that.
It was the Austrian upbringing.
Everything, they correct everything.
The grades are no good and the soccer,
why didn't you kick the ball?
You were like 10 yards away from the goal.
You didn't kick it in, you dripped over the ball.
I mean, come on out.
It was always some kind of a complaint.
Always trying to correct you. Exactly, that Arno. It was always some kind of a complaint. Always trying to correct you.
Exactly. That's right. Yeah. It was always a complaint. And then if you made a mistake,
you get smacked and stuff like that. So it was that kind of upbringing. But it was very
helpful to me because it actually gave me the motivation to leave Austria.
And it gives you control. I mean, if your way, if your bodybuilding, it's just you against
you. There's no, you don't have to depend on anybody else. I mean, I guess you have to depend on the judges when you go to actually, um, compete, but day to day,
it is you against your own, uh, emotions and mentality and ability. Yes. But also at the same
time, even though it is a sport that you are on your own, but then the end, you still rely on your
training partners. I was very fortunate always that I had the mentality of being able to attract the best training partners.
So I had guys that were as hungry as I was.
Because that's the important thing.
If you have someone that is not as hungry, then it doesn't really mean anything.
But if you have someone that competes with you, that counts out the reps,
then he wants to do an extra two reps more than you do and you get up to weight and all this stuff.
So always has good training about this.
So I'm a big believer in that we really can't on the end do anything by ourselves.
Right.
That's why we say don't call me a self-made man, uh, because I'm a
product of a lot of, lot of help if it is in bodybuilding or just, I mean,
think about Joe Weider after winning two Mr.
Universe titles in London.
The amateur Mr. Universe the following year 1968 the professional Mr. Universe.
So I was like the youngest Mr. Universe ever. And that was the year after you got second?
That's right. Okay. 1966. You were 20 years old. In second 1967 I was 20 years old.
And I wanted to become the youngest Mr. Universe.
So now I'm then at stage exactly where Reg Park was,
and when the Mr. Universe.
And not only that,
but the Reg Park immediately sent me a fax
to London and said,
I want to invite you to South Africa
to give posing exhibitions and do a strongman act down there.
So I was invited by Reg Park, which eventually then by the end of the year, I went down to South Africa.
And you still hadn't gone to the US yet?
I haven't gone to the US.
What brought me to the US was, which was kind of my dream.
Someone would notice me in bodybuilding, that it would take me to a bigger...
Because bodybuilding was an American sport.
Oh, it was?
Not a European sport. It was an American sport. Oh, it was. Another European sport.
It was an American sport really.
And so I always had to get this invitation from Joe Weider, who was the publisher of
the muscle magazines.
He published like four big muscle magazines, Flex and Strength and Health and all of those
magazines.
Oh yeah, we used to get some of them I think when I was a kid.
And Muscle and Fitness, all of this.
And he had also an equipment company, the food supplement company.
Because it's weights, right? I've seen the weights before.
It's weights, it's the food supplements, and his brother was the head of the organization,
the Bodybuilding Federation.
Got it. And this is when you came to the U.S.?
Yeah, so he brought me over in 1968.
Okay, before we get there, Arnold, and not to interrupt you
or anything, but you did a show.
You went to one of the first interracial shows
that was in South Africa?
That was later on.
Oh, that was later on.
OK.
So it was 1975.
Got it.
OK, so you get to the US.
Very good research.
Do you remember your first?
Thank you.
Do you remember your first day in America?
Oh, yes.
It was in Miami. I went to Miami and I was competing there in a competition.
And then after that, I came out to California and I was picked up in California at the airport
by a bodybuilding photographer with the name of Arie Zeller and Dick Tyler who wrote for the muscle magazines.
They picked me up and took me to an apartment
that Joe Weider rented for me and it was fantastic.
I mean, from then on, I got all the help in the world now
because that's when I really realized the generosity
of the American people.
Wow.
I mean, they gave me, I mean, the bodybuilders,
there was Thanksgiving came up after that
because I came over here in October,
November was Thanksgiving.
So there was like this whole thing about,
you know, giving me pillows and giving me blankets
and giving me dishes and silverware.
Where were you homeless or something?
But again, why were they giving you all that?
Oh, just to make you feel welcome.
When you move into an apartment,
what do you get?
I mean, it was a furnished apartment.
And you were living in LA at that point?
Yeah, yeah, it was in the valley,
over there in the valley.
And then all these bodybuilders came to me
and they brought me all this stuff.
It was unbelievable.
So I could not even believe how generous they were.
And this was a lot of times people that didn't know me at all.
But just because bodybuilding and joining a club,
you know, you become kind of part of that family.
And so they were very, very sweet and kind.
And I would never forget that.
That's actually what made me then think about,
well, when I ever make it, I will give that back.
I will help other people myself, you know.
What's it like finding a gym that really fits you?
Like what's that like at that level of bodybuilding?
Were there a couple gyms you tried out and you're like, this isn't it?
Or did you already know where you wanted to be?
I came over here.
There was a gym called Vince's Gym that had all the champions training.
Where was that located?
It was over in the valley, in Vendura Boulevard in North Hollywood.
And a very, very famous gym. This was Larry Scott, Mr. Olympia trained, and
Don Howard, who was Mr. America, and Don Peterson, all those guys were training there.
And then I mentioned over here every so often for powerlifting. There was a gym called Gold's Gym.
Not many bodybuilders trained there, some, but I mean not many.
Most of them were like shot putters and powerlifters and weightlifters and so on.
And it was a much more rough gym.
But somehow because of the Austrian gym where I kind of started the first three years
in this weightlifting club, it reminded me of that.
So I started getting more and more attracted to that gym.
And then I moved from the valley over here.
To Venice.
To Venice.
And I was still part of Santa Monica, actually.
It was, you know, Ashland, one of the streets not far away from here.
And then I went daily training there.
And then Gold's Gym, then other bodybuilders came
from all over the country to train there too.
Because you were there?
Well, I was there and there was Joe Weider
and I started writing in his magazines
about Arnold is training in Gorge Gym.
And if you want to go and train in a great place,
this is the place to go.
Was it hard for you to train?
I mean, were people at that point
just standing around watching you train? No, because there was a lot of, you know, I mean,
this place was filled with great bodybuilders. Oh, I see. Yeah. Oh yeah. So then others came out
here from Florida and from Kentucky and from New York, and they all started joining Gorge Gym instead
of training there. So this was kind of like the place that had the best bodybuilders in the world training in coach.
That's how coach Jim became famous.
Because it was a little gym, it was not big,
it was 3,000 square feet, I think it was.
Well, I remember when I first moved to Los Angeles,
we went to Firehouse, I don't know if it's still there or not.
Yeah, yeah, Firehouse.
Was that the place, it was a big protein place,
it was like a, was that, I think it was?
Well, Firehouse now is a restaurant down there.
It used to be like a place where you could get literally like a bowl of chicken.
Yeah, yeah. You still can get there. You can get great scrambled eggs.
You can get like 30 eggs or whatever.
Yeah, yeah. Exactly. Yeah.
That's crazy. It was like...
Yeah.
Yeah, I remember I ate... I ordered like a month worth of food right there just for one...
Just at lunch.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it took me like five hours to get
out of there just because I didn't want to like. Yeah. I was never a big eater. So to me that meant
nothing. If I had a little steak and some two scrambled eggs, I was perfectly fine. I was full.
For the day? Not for the day. No, but let's say in the morning, steak and eggs, or scrambled eggs,
or something like this. I always had to take protein drinks in between meals
because I could never eat enough to get my 250 grams of protein because I weighed 250 pounds.
And the idea then was that for every kind of pound of body weight you have, you should have
one gram of protein. Yeah. When, uh, cause I used to buy some, I don't know if I used to bodybuild,
I used to use steroids when I was like growing up and just lift weights a lot. I loved it for years, you know? And I think whenever
I get like, you know, whenever I quit working as much, I'll probably try to get back more
weight lifting. Was steroids pretty popular then or what was it like? Was that part of the,
because I'm sure it was part of the culture. It was not yet, but it was something that was
in the beginning, very experimental.
So would you hear it? Like, would it be like on the black market or it was just like
public? It was just like people would talk about it like as a supplement.
It might be in some places was in the black market. I don't know. But all I know is, is that we always
went to a doctor because they want to make sure that they measure your blood pressure and they
check your health and all of that stuff because it has side effects.
Oh yeah.
Especially if you take it beyond of what they recommend.
So if they recommend let's say one shot a week and you start taking one shot a day or something,
which is of course the case a lot of today that people are overdosing and that's why you see
some bodybuilders actually die because of the overdose of drugs and all this stuff.
Did you see friends go down that road or people as other bodybuilders go down that road where
they would get addicted to it?
Not in my days.
It was the new, but now it's, I think really somewhat, I would say out of control.
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Whenever you start,
like you've had such an interesting life and career,
you've gotten to do so many things.
What do you think, was there a time period in your life
that you wish you had maybe done
like a little bit different, you know?
No, I don't really, there's no move that ever made career wise.
I thought that I had a real good nose when to make my moves forward and when I should
retire from bodybuilding, when it felt like, okay, I don't have the joy anymore. After six,
after five Mr. Universe competitions that I won, Mr. World and Mr. Olympia six times,
I retired in 1975 after that competition in South Africa that you mentioned just earlier.
So that was kind of the last competition. I did come back in 1980 again for the Mistol Ompere, but that was really
more just an afterthought. But I mean really I retired in 1975. And after the South African show?
After the South African show. Can you tell me a little bit about that? Because I bet it was
really interesting just South Africa is probably my favorite country. I mean it is beautiful.
It is a gorgeous country. And of course, at that time,
blacks and whites and everyone was separated.
I mean, separated meaning they had different rights.
You know, the whites were the ones that ruled the country.
The blacks were kind of kept down.
Was Desmond Tutu down there at the time,
do you know if he was speaking?
Yes, of course he was.
But I mean, the whites really were kind of in control.
They were the kind of leaders of the...
Exactly.
The Dutch and the British.
There was always a fight between those two in the parliament and all that.
And so then I got to meet and to know the Minister of Immigration.
And he was also Minister of Sports and Minister of Labour and blah, blah, blah.
So he was a very, very powerful guy in administration.
And he, when I met him, he said to me,
Arnold, when you come over here to South Africa
and you do posing exhibitions and strongman acts,
you should also go to the townships.
To the townships?
Yeah.
So I said the townships.
Like the Soweto's?
Yeah, so it was, of course, I did not know. So he then explained it to me. And then he would
organize with the Reg Park together for me to go in because he was not what would become the
safest place in town. Not that they wanted to do harm to you, but I mean, for someone like me to come in there and do a demonstration there.
Oh, they'll meet you there. I mean, everyone, everyone got lit. I mean, they were drunk,
they were celebrating that someone will come in and give them the respect and do something
special for them. So very appreciative, right? So I will go in there and I was in the cage.
Into the Soweto's? Is that what it's called? Can you bring that up for me, Nick?
Yeah, the townships, they're all over the place. In every town in South Africa, there's
downships like that. There's places where the blacks would live, right?
Yeah, I think they're called the Sowettos.
Are they or not?
That's one of them.
Yeah, Sowettos. Yeah, I think so.
So in any case, I would go in there and do a demonstration, do my posing,
and the lift weights and all of this kind of stuff.
In these in these small like townships?
Yeah, there was like, you know, thousands of them surrounding and then just in a screaming loud and having the greatest time and then we would go out.
Oh, they would put you on the grill. I'm so I bet they were star so hungry sometimes they would be like, look at this well fed guy.
It was it was fantastic. The reception and everything. So,
but the reason I mentioned that is because it led to the conversation with, uh, you know, uh, that
minister of sports, um, and, uh, he said to me, he says, we should have an international competition here in South Africa.
He says we should work together on that.
And I said, okay, we will.
And his name was Dr. Kornhof.
Dr. Kornhof.
And he was an extraordinary man, very, very smart.
But it just shows you that there was people like him that already wanted to do more for
the blacks and to elevate them.
So he then, I set him up with Ben Weider, with Joe Weider's brother, who was the head
of the International Federation of Bodybuilding.
They got together and they hit it off really well.
And so Joe Weider and Ben Weider worked with him to bring the Mr. Olympia contest to South
Africa, to Pretoria, the capital of South Africa.
But the conditions were that they were able to have a mixed audience.
Okay.
So black and white audience, had they done that ever?
Never.
Wow.
So there was the first time there was black, was blacks, but there was not just black and
white in South Africa.
There was a group that was called blacks.
There was a group that was called colored.
There was a group that was called Indians.
There was a group that was white.
I mean, there was like five different Asians.
So, everyone was different.
A lot of variety.
It was kind of like, it was not considered we are all equal there, right?
And so what Ben negotiated was that we have a mixed audience.
That anyone, no matter what their nationality and what their kind of color is,
or religious beliefs, anyone should be able to come to this competition.
Wow.
And also not only that, but to be a judge,
we will have also half black
and half white judges, blah, blah, blah.
So was that scary to go before a black judge?
Did you think that they would judge you fairly?
I would be-
No, not at all, because they were not.
I mean, I was competing in America at that time already.
Oh, you were used to it.
And I was used to it.
There was Leary Colbert, who was the first guy
with the one 22 inch arms,
big, big bodybuilder from the fifties and sixties.
And he was a judge in New York several times and he was a totally honest judge.
There was other black judges that, so there was, that's the great thing about bodybuilding.
Bodybuilding there was no prejudice.
You know, there were some people in bodybuilding that were prejudiced, but in general,
especially under the Wieders, the Wieders, I think because they were Jewish, I think it had something
to do with the fact that they were that kind of open-minded about it. Oh yeah, a lot of times
they're like the leaders in promoting diversity. That's right. Yes.
There was no prejudice.
There was no prejudice there at all.
And as a matter of fact, there was a guy by the name of Bob Hoffman.
He always made sure that when they had the AAU had the Mr. America competition, only
whites could win.
No black could win there.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
So there was really embarrassing.
So there were some barriers within the... There was guys like Sergio Liva that would be competing in 1966 or 1965 in the Mr. American.
He would get beaten by white guys. And it was totally unfair. Or Harold Poole got beaten in
1963 by Bern Viva, which I thought was unfair. So, it was, there was this... So, what they did
then was because there was now two federations. There was the IFBB, there was the AEU in Napa.
AEU?
The American Athletic Union.
Yeah.
And so they then went from that federation over to the IFBB and there Sergio Lever won
immediately.
Got it.
He became Mr. America, he became Mr. World and Mr. Universe, then Mr. Olympia and he
actually in the first Mr. Olympia competition,
Sergio Lever beat me.
Wow.
1969, fairly.
I mean, there was no complaints there at all
because he was extraordinary, right?
And so then in 1970, I came back
and I beat him in the Mr. World competition
in Columbus, Ohio.
And then two weeks later in the Mr. Olympia in New York.
So we were big rivals. And that was of course a big admirer of his and a big idol and he treated me really well.
We went to Chicago and trained together at the Duncan YMCA and all that stuff. I wanted to learn from him.
I love the YMCA, don't you?
Oh, absolutely. It's great.
I've always been a fan of the YMCA.
It's just kind of like they're always a little bit met, like, it's never perfect there,
but everything's kind of like a little bit old enough where I like the equipment, you know, it's never too fancy.
Yeah, but you can get the job done.
To me, it's not about the luxury, it's just much more about the will to succeed. And when I see pictures online of bodybuilders that are training in the sand in Africa right now, blacks,
that are having cement weights on a bar and a cheap bench.
And when they do their bench press, and the other day I saw one of those kind of videos,
and they get up from the bench.
I'm looking at this guy could win Mr. America, win Mr. California or something like that.
He looks extraordinary. So it's really not the technology so much. It helps you. But I mean,
on the end, it is really what you have to work and it's the will.
Oh, the will was the best. There's nothing better than just having like a little
weight bench outside in your backyard or something.
And you go out there or in your garage and it's just.
I did my deadlift right in front of the house in Graz,
in Tar, which now is a museum at the house where I grew up in.
Your home is a museum where you grew up?
The home, exactly, yeah.
Yeah, I'm going to go with it in two weeks.
We have a pump club is meeting there with the European bodybuilders members from the
pump club.
And then there's some Americans that also coming over there.
That audience in South Africa, what was, did it have the feeling during the show of like,
this is like a novel thing.
This is like a, like, was there that energy in the, in the, in the event?
There was so much energy in that auditorium.
And it was not a big auditorium.
It maybe held, I would say, 1500 people, I would guess.
And it was, the energy was fantastic.
The joy of being together was fantastic.
And I really think that had a tremendous impact also in the future of South Africa.
And it was just wonderful that there were leaders there that believed in that and wanted
to organize.
And everyone, the police, everyone was really cooperative.
Everyone worked together.
So it was a fantastic show, a fantastic competition.
And of course I won.
So it was always a fantastic competition.
And when he went, it was's sixth Mr. Olympia but I what was interesting about it was I
got a thousand dollars cash prize and I was really upset about that because I
felt like wait a minute in 1965 ten years ago
Larry Scott when he won Mr. Olympia, got a thousand dollars.
And now 10 years later, we still get a thousand dollars.
So that's what made me actually motivated to go then in front of the IFBB, the International
Bodybuilding Congress, and to ask them for permission to organize the next year's Mr.
Olympia in Columbus, Ohio.
And that's exactly what we did.
I got the permission and then we upped the cash price to $5,000, then to $10,000 to 20,
we doubled it every year.
And now we're giving over a million dollars away for cash prizes with the Arnold Classic.
What's like one of the things right before you go on, because I'm you're backstage right you wait to go on and they call your name out and
then you go out and do your poses is that how it goes? Well it's in those
days the way it worked was the whole lineup of all the competitors. Now if
them understand Mr. Olympia means that you have to have won a World
Championship title before. So Mr. World, Mr. International,
or Mr. Universe. So those guys are the top guys. So you have like six or seven guys that are on the
stage. And so the judges, they ask you the order to come out. You have a certain time at one o'clock,
be ready for pre-judging. And then you come out and then you stand there and then the
judges will shuffle you around.
And this is okay.
Can number seven go over where number one is and number one goes over where number
seven was, you know, just see them next to each other, different people next to
each other, there is a turnaround turn sideways.
Uh, then what's the scariest way to be turned?
Like, was there ever a part where you're like, this is, I got to kind
of cheat this angle a little bit.
No, I mean, for me, it was basically always a tremendous joy to be up on stage
because it's one of those things where you feel like when you're really ready.
I always felt kind of like most cases that I was so ready that no matter what
angle it was, I was ready to go and I had
always a smile on my face and I flexed everything and you know the key thing is that you have
practiced your posing enough that you can stand there in a flexed position. It looks relaxed,
you stand there like this but you still flex. You keep the stomach in and you keep the abs flexed
and the calves flexed and the biceps and the triceps flexed. So keep the stomach in and you keep the abs flexed
and the calves flexed and the biceps and the triceps flexed.
So that was the idea.
And I was always having great joy with that.
So it's a lot of acting too.
It's kind of some acting up there.
It is one of the great forms of acting.
Why?
Because you cannot go and say to the judge,
look at me, I'm the most perfect up here.
Look at my abs.
No, you have to do all that without talking.
You have to communicate with them
and also with the audience.
Because remember that the sound of the audience
is very important because you want to get big applause.
So the judge say, oh, this guy got the most applause.
I mean, he definitely has the best body.
So, but then you wait for the individual posing. So then you come at one
after the next, you do a three minute posing routine. And what's the tricks there? Is there
any trick of the trade, a last minute thing you use, you would like pinch your, pinch your tits
or just rub some just like molasses into your lint? Like was there, what was like a last minute
thing people would do, put ice under your arms or something? No, I think the key thing is just that when you go there,
that you're so ready that you don't shake.
You get it, how many bodybuilders,
I'm sure you've seen it, they hit a shot
and then they, after a few seconds, they start shaking.
Oh, so that's bad.
For that level, I mean, it's natural
when you have a Mr. Venice Beach competition, or Mr.cle Beach. Mr. Montgomery, Alabama, yeah. You know,
beginners, of course, they make mistakes and they're not as well trained, but when you get
to the Mr. Olympia level, it's unacceptable. Oh, so you want to make it look so that you want to
control the shake. You hit the shot, yeah, and you smile, you look at the judges and you smile.
And then you smoothly move into the next shot.
Pop, bang.
No, and then it hands, just a movement.
It has to be all very gracefully and no shaking.
So that again, that you say to the judges, look, I am so ready for this.
Unlike maybe the others. So that's what it is. So it's all about
the seven P's. You know, the seven P's. Proper prior planning prevents pissed poor performance.
The Marines, they have that. Proper prior planning prevents piss poor performance.
Exactly. So that's what it's about.
It's the same there.
You come prepared.
You make sure that you work.
Everyone has weak points.
So you have to make sure that you worked as much on your weak points so that the judges
see that you're not blind.
That you noticed that last year you maybe had not so defined legs.
Yes, maybe you won, but the legs were so-so.
And then the next year when you come back,
you have to have ripped legs.
Right.
Right, so then the judge said, that guy got the message.
So this is what it's all about.
Because in the end, you really are an artist.
You're a sculptor.
You're not just the athlete that's competing, but you're a sculptor.
You're not just the athlete that's competing,
but you're the sculptor.
You're sculpting on your own body.
Instead of a chisel and a hammer
that you kind of sculpt a physique,
you do it now with machines and with the reps
and the different exercises where you say,
I need a little bit more of the rear deltoids.
I need a little bit more separation in the fronttoids. I need a little bit more separation
in the front between the deltoid and the pectoral muscle.
I need a little bit more cut in the lower abs.
I need the calves have to be balanced.
They're gonna not big enough for the arms
because it should be the same size as your arms are.
And all of those kinds of things.
So you become kind of like an artist in your own body.
That's what the idea is.
Was there a, was it, do you ever like have to work out
the top of your feet or your hand?
Were there things you could do for your face even
and stuff like that?
No, no.
That's the, I mean, people did pay attention to that.
I didn't.
Right.
To me, it's always about the bottom line.
Yeah.
So, but what is it that we're doing here?
What we're doing here is we're showing
the most perfect physique and who is the best in actually displaying that physique.
Because it's all about, you know, presentation, presentation, presentation.
It's like a piece of art. You know, you can have a painting that is maybe amongst
many other paintings and you wouldn't even notice there's a Picasso. But then
when they put it up there on a white wall and did a beautiful gold frame with the
special lighting and then you have someone talk about it now you can
auction something off for a lot of money. It's all about presentation and so
this is why I think the same is also in bodybuilding and the way you present
your body and the way you present your muscles. And did at that point, I mean, I can see now how even like lobbying for certain things
to be changing in, um, like in the prize money, right?
I can almost see where your direction comes to even end up in politics, right?
You can start to see it like, well, this should be more, this, there should be some adjustments.
You weren't just like a competitor.
You were also somebody who is examining how things were run and how they could be better,
especially when you were partnering with guys
like Ben Whiter and stuff like that,
and probably inspired by those guys
to probably get this larger vision
of things that were going on.
Did you, when you got into film,
so at that point, you know how to act,
you know how to impress the front row,
you know how to use probably every element of your body
to impress people,
so that kind of just leansans leads kind of perfectly into acting.
Yeah, but remember that what is key and all of this stuff is also personality.
And I don't know if you can train a personality or not.
I mean, I don't know what you think about that.
But I mean, I think some people just don't have the greatest person.
Some people have a great personality. Yeah. You know, and so I think some people just don't have the greatest personality. Oh yeah, some people are boring.
And then some people have a great personality.
And so I think that I developed over the years,
not that someone taught me that, but I developed a personality
because my joy for whatever I did came through.
So when people talked to me about bodybuilding in those days,
I was not shy of the press.
Other bodybuilders for decades
didn't talk to the press. So when I came over here, people thought that when they saw my body,
they thought it was a football player or it was a wrestler or something like that. But the last
thing they guessed was a bodybuilder. So they didn't know about bodybuilding. So I, in 1974,
I hired, I was the first bodybuilder to hire a publicist.
And so we went and did talk shows,
the Johnny Carson show, Muf Griffin show,
Mike Douglas show, and all of those shows.
And were there football teams that tried to get you
to come and play for them?
Did you ever get an offer?
No, because I mean, I think I made it very clear
in my interviews that my vision is
be the greatest bodybuilder of all times
and to go then into acting.
So even when people came to me, because I was always very good in business,
I studied business, I got my degree in business while I was over here
and doing the training for bodybuilding.
At SMC?
Did you go to SMC?
I went to Santa Monica City College, to UCLA and to, you know, got my degree in business and it was like business
administration and I was just naturally always gifted for making deals and being
creative. Got it. You know, and, and, and, and I always understood how it works.
Right. So in bodybuilding, for instance, it's one thing to say, okay, I'm going to up the cash price to $20,000.
Let's say from like within a three year period, we had, we give away $20,000 and a beginning,
but then you have to say, okay, where do we get this money from?
Ah, sponsors.
Right.
So now I have to go out and hassle the sponsors.
And this is now of course, we have the biggest bodybuilding and fitness convention in Columbus, Ohio in the world. We have 200,000 people coming through there.
Wow.
In three days. We have every company displaying their products, their machines,
their food supplements, clothing.
At the Arnold's it's called?
The Arnold's Classic.
Arnold Classic.
It's always the first week in March and it's three days the whole thing. So now, like I said,
now we're raising enough money
where we can give away over a million dollars
as a matter of fact, it's coming here.
You're going to go up to a million and a half dollars.
So it's like, so it's all kinds of great things happen.
But I was able to build it to that
because I have a business mind.
And I know exactly how that works
and how do we attract everyone and bring everyone together.
Were there women all weightlifting at that time or no?
There were.
The first Mr. Olympia, Miss Olympia competition was a guy by the name of Schneider from,
he was from back East from Philadelphia area.
And we did that together.
Oh, you guys started it?
Yeah.
Well, yes, because the women were all kind of complaining,
why can't we compete? So we did a little show and we called it Miss Olympia. And because the
International Federation of Bodybuilding at that point had no interest in women bodybuilding.
Why was that, do you think? Was it just their view of women at the time?
No, it's, it's, at the time, it was, they were stuck and we created this federation for the
guys. Oh yeah, it's a boys club. Why are we getting, it's like gym owners like Joe Gould,
he would not let women train. Why? Because it was against women. No, we love women coming in there,
but he figured I don't have the room for another bathroom here. I have 3000 square feet. I have
only for the man, the shower and the bathroom. Some of those girls are pissed standing up. I have 3000 square feet. I have only for the man, the shower and the bathroom.
Some of those girls are pissed standing up. I'll tell you. Yeah. But I mean, we had women coming
in and they watch us work out, but they couldn't train there until they got in a bigger space.
And then women were included in the whole thing. And so the federation was a little bit reluctant
to do that. And when we did the Miss Olympia and all of the girls really enjoyed that, that
they were able to go on stage and to also compete with the muscles and all that stuff.
The Federation then woke up and they said, okay, we're going to get involved in that
and we're going to go get them. And since then it has been booming, you know, and they've
been doing not only bodybuilding competitions, but fitness competitions and beauty competitions.
Does Arnold Classic have a women's division?
Oh yeah, absolutely.
Oh, that's great. I didn't know that. Sorry. Oh wow. Look at these chocolate babies right here.
Yeah. Everybody kind of gets chocolatier.
Huh?
They're tanned. Now you have this tanning stuff.
Was it real tanning back then or was it?
No.
What was the key to the best tan?
The best tan?
We got the best tan that we could get.
So I would work out a lot of times outside in the weightlifting platform in Venice.
Oh yeah, I love that.
So you get kind of tanned all over the place.
They're doing chin-ups and doing bench presses and incline and dips and all that stuff.
Then we would jump in the ocean again, come back and work out some more and all this. But in the end, we then added to that tan,
tan in a minute by Helena Rubenstein. So I don't even know if this exists anymore.
Bring it up tan in a minute. But 60 second, uh, su-suvé they're not. Bring it up 10 in a minute, huh? But 60 second, uh, sous, sous-vay, they call it.
That was in, in those days, it was the big trick.
So you put it on with a sponge, you know, you just poured it out on a little plate and
you put it on with a sponge and you hit a body of yours that did your back and stuff
in the back of the thighs and all of that stuff.
So this is what he did.
That's why a lot of guys, the day they sprayed on, they have actual experts
come to the bodybuilding show and backstage there's a people that manufacture this tanning stuff and
they wouldn't help bodybuilders and just spray it on and all of that. So it's much more professional
today. But at the time, so you would, so they would put that tan in a can basically? Yeah,
they would put it in a bottle. It was in a bottle. Okay. And you'd have a friend do your back.
Would anybody ever sabotage somebody and not do their back really good?
No, but I mean, there were some people that were really stupid and then did not know how
to put it on.
Maybe it would show kind of like streaks of the, of the, because it didn't have a little
mulatto around the wrist.
So we put on just a light kind of layer.
It was all about just a little subtle thing because it's not going to make you win.
It just makes you the photos look a little bit better and you have a little bit of color.
And what was it called if somebody went too dark? Would you just call them a little chocolate bunny or something?
No, it was up to the individual.
As a matter of fact, they tell you that you can see in our Arnold Classic a lot of times when the guys turn around,
you sometimes don't even know who is black and who is not.
Oh yeah, I know.
Because they're so dark now, the tanning has gone so sophisticated and so brown.
Look at this guy.
Yeah, so he's a perfect example.
When he turns around, you would think it's a black guy standing.
For sure, and a nutmeg fella, yeah.
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OK, Dad, showtime.
No!
I'm very protective of my team.
Witness protection was our only choice, but all of us living on the one roof can get awkward.
Nope. Oh, no.
Oh my God.
Bad Donny, bad Donny.
Hello, Luke.
Greta.
Underneath the foreign stars in a foreign place
Greta Noso, East German spy, disappeared in 1989.
Cool, Dad. Your terrorist friend is amazing.
Who the hell is that?
Theodore Chips, former MI6 agent.
He works for me. Together, we'll destroy the world.
You're gorgeous.
Are you serious?
You spying on us.
Us spying on you.
Well, Emma's pregnant.
That got your tongue?
I hope not. I may need it in the future.
Sex? She means sex.
Bling.
World War III is about to jump off.
Get out of there! Ready? No! No!
Hold on, old man!
Boom!
I told you. I'm back.
I want to talk about your new show.
You do have some, some stuff just so we make sure we talk about it, man.
FUBAR.
I watched your first episode, so I guess it's not out yet, right? No. And in season two, it's kind of great because
it brings me through all this nostalgia of watching you over the years, right? I feel like it's a
little bit of all the... To me, this is perception and it could be judgment, but a little bit of all
your roles in the one. Did it feel like that a little bit when you're shooting it or? Well, the idea of the show is, of course, when you act out, then you find those moments
where you can play all of the different roles.
But the idea of the show is just to do like what we did with True Lies, what Jim Cameron
did with True Lies, right?
So it was like, how do we go and do a show where you pack it with action and also with comedy, with humor,
and also with kind of soap opera, where there's relationships, interesting relationships, and so on.
And so I think that the writers did a really good job because just like in True Lies, I'm the number one spy in this show.
But when I come home, so I kick ass out there. I take care of the job all the time.
Wipe out the enemy, all the terrorists notice, but when I come home, I have to
deal with the everyday crap, right?
Like we all do, right?
If you have to worry about the kids, the wife, the wife is mad at you because you
were gone for a week again and you couldn't really explain.
You always, I always, because my wife does not know that I'm a spy, so she always had to lie and have
to have this equipment company and there's a health convention there, they have to go
to this convention, then I come home and I have to make up stories.
I said, this sales guy is really interesting.
I said, I tried to sell my equipment there and over there talked about his life cycles.
All of a sudden I said, I was so upset about this whole...
And so, you know, you just make up all these stories, which is a...
But I'm getting, you know, there's a divorce there then, you know,
then my daughter all of a sudden is in the CIA and then she's also a spy and all of this stuff.
So there's all this conflicts that are going on and it makes it a really interesting show then to watch
because it's relationships, it's action, it's funny and all that. And so, last show did very well, the last
series and the second season. And so now we see how that is doing. Yeah, I think there's like a
level of also nostalgia just getting to see you still operate in these roles, you know, like you
continue to keep your, I mean, you're, you know,
you just continue to want to work. It does, cause you don't have to work anymore. Well, let me tell
you something. I love to work. Why? Because it makes you active. And I just think the most important
thing is as we get older, you don't have to worry about any of that right now.
But I mean, eventually you will.
When you get older, you just, you have a tendency of sitting around.
You have a tendency of not moving as much.
And so it forces you.
So when you do a movie, you have to get up at six in the morning, you have to get to
the set, you have to go and prep, you have to go and practice the action and all that stuff in the fight scenes,
you have to do the rehearsals of the scenes and you work until night.
Then you go home and you fall bed tired and then you get up again in the morning.
And remember the most important thing for your brain is to go and practice and to kind
of do challenging things with your brain so you don't get Alzheimer's
and other kind of diseases like that.
So it makes you memorize lines, long scenes, and especially in TV, you do like six to eight
or 10 pages a day.
Oh, just keeping your brain active.
So you bring it around.
And then I play chess on the side while I'm waiting for the scenes and all this.
Just keep always going. So to me, the important thing is because I feel like
if you rest, you rust. And so it's all about movement. It's all about keep moving and keep
moving and keep challenging yourself. Because as soon as we retire, you know, things go south.
Yeah. I mean, there's just something that happens.
Well, especially Alzheimer's. Especially, it's Alzheimer's.
Schwarzenegger Alzheimer's, they almost seem like they would be neighbor.
You know what I'm saying?
Like no judgment or anything, but it almost seems like that would be the one that would
look for you because of just your same letters, some of the same letters even.
I have enough with my heart problem.
So I mean, I don't have to worry about another problem forever.
The last 25 years I had heart open heart surgery, you know, three times
and all that kind of stuff, and valve replacements and all that stuff.
It's a congenital thing from my mother.
She had it from her mother and all that stuff.
And so, I have to deal with that all the time.
But everything is good because I train every day and I exercise and I watch what I eat,
which is I watch the food and then I eat it.
Did you ever have a stroke and you just kind of you're like, I've kind of had that before I can get through the rest of the day?
No, no, none of that.
You know what I'm talking about though? Yeah.
Like did you ever have like, because sometimes you'll get a pain or something and you're like,
I think I'm okay. Did you ever have like, I'm assuming if you had a life, a lifetime of like
having heart issues that you would start to be like, ah, that's going to be okay. No, it was never, it was, I always was kind of in front of the situation.
So that means that I remember when I took my mother to the hospital here when she was
here visiting, she always had an episode and I took her to UCLA.
That's when we found out that she had a valve problem.
And the doctor then said to me, he says, make sure that you also check yourself.
He says, because this is something that's a genetic thing. So it's almost like a gift that
she got to be here and you got to go through that with her. Exactly. So I, from that point on,
always went with the doctor and the doctor said to me, he says, well, you have, you know, at one
point he said, you have a problem with your valve, with the aortic valve. And you don't have to do anything now,
it's just butt. As soon as we see it going down, we want to catch it before it goes down,
because otherwise it affects the aorta itself and blah, blah, blah. So the bottom line is,
I stayed on top of it and always, so when I got my surgery, open heart surgery,
I went in there because I made an appointment. So there was no episode, there was no stroke,
there was no heart attack or anything. Never had any of those kinds of
things. So I always was ahead of the game.
Was it scary when they put you under? Like, were you kind of scared?
Did you make sure it was the best guy doing it, Arnold?
Because you got to have the best guy.
Of course. Of course it's important.
Did you look him in the eyes and take him off the side and say, hey, let's make sure
we do it good.
No, I don't have to do that now. I think I would do that for sure. I knew this guy's history. Dr. Starnes was his name. They did the first surgery first surgeries and he was like
the top of the top. So there's no do is about it. When you you've had such a like you've had a very
blessed and interesting life, right? It's been you know,, and you've had it, so you know.
At what point you're probably, I would say, I think it's fair to say you're probably
in the second half of your life.
At what point do you, like, do kind of like,
goals turn into like legacy, if in your mind at all,
if it does, and I don't mean that to be
an uncomfortable question, I'm just like,
does your brain start to adjust where like,
these are my goals, and then like, like okay this is a legacy that I want to
leave. Does that make any sense or no? Well I think it is always important to
think about you know the idea of that we should leave the world a better place
than we inherited it. And so I my my whole life was always about, okay, how can I make this a better world
of the knowledge that I have?
So for instance, in fitness, in bodybuilding, I went around the world to promote the
idea of weightlifting and weight training and resistance training.
Oh yeah.
And made it then popular, right?
Because we had to figure out a way of penetrating through the general public
that thought that bodybuilding
is just flexing your muscles on stage.
But they didn't realize that bodybuilding is something
that you just get a healthy and strong body
for whatever you do.
You maybe need it for tennis,
you maybe need it for your bicycling,
you maybe need it for your whatever sport,
like UFC fighters are working out.
Oh, the first time I heard of fitness was through you.
Yeah.
It was through you.
But I mean, that was the idea is I wanted to not just lift myself up,
but I wanted to lift the rest of the bodybuilding movement up.
And so it was always something.
So now, of course, 50 years later, there's a gymnasium in every hotel in the world.
There is a gymnasium or weight room in every kind of a military installation of
base. There's those guys we saw there doing those curls with the cement. Exactly. So people are
lifting weights everywhere. Every high school, every college, every sports team, everyone has
weight rooms. So this is where we are now. So this is why I felt really proud of that, that we were able, with the help of Jane Fonda
and other kind of characters that were helping women
with the fitness movement.
And so we really elevated the fitness sport
to something really, also a huge economic contribution
that it made.
So to me, that's important that when I became governor,
I wanted to make sure that we have healthcare for everybody.
I want to make sure that we have a clean environment, that we fight pollution and to pass laws to
reduce the pollution in California by 25% and all that.
So I continued on creating an environmental organization and to have a world summit in
Vienna every year where all the environmentalists come together and
talk about how do we go and fight pollution and all this stuff. So we have
one coming up in 14 days now again and so it's always after school programs for
instance when I realized that our kids that you know 70% of the kids come from
a home where both of the parents are working so there's no way they're
picking them up after 3 o'clock parents are working. So there's no way they're picking them up after three
o'clock from the school.
Right.
So there's kids standing around after school and not doing anything.
So then I found out where this is the danger zone for kids between three
and six o'clock because there's no supervision.
So they get involved with drugs, with gangs, with violence, with
alcohol, teenage pregnancy.
Oh yeah.
I said, this costs the community a lot of money.
Let's do something about it. Everyone was complaining about it,
but they weren't doing anything about it.
So I stepped out and I started the after-school programs.
And it has been a huge hit.
We have raised over the last 30 years.
Are they still open?
The program just started?
$1.5 billion we raised.
Oh really? How much was it?
All over the country.
We have been to millions and millions of kids.
We have helped with after-school programs. We have been to millions and millions of kids. We have helped with after school programs.
We had great success rates and all of that stuff.
So to me it's all about how can I make this a better world.
I see what you're saying.
So you feel like a lot of your legacy has kind of been lived along the way.
Exactly. It's not like this should be my legacy.
I don't think that way, but I think about I want to improve the world, especially...
Now.
But I mean, think about it.
I'm an immigrant.
I'm an immigrant that came over here
and got every opportunity in the world because of America.
Right.
America gave me everything.
They gave me the money that they have made,
the career in bodybuilding, the career in acting,
the wonderful family.
All of that stuff is because of America.
So to me it's a natural thing that they give something back to America.
Well you're one of the most jacked immigrants too that we've ever had probably I think,
for sure. I hope so. Yeah you do and you're competitive about it. I love that you know I
can feel how competitive you are and that's. You have to be competitive because also America is a platform for if you are competitive and if you choose to apply yourself that you can
reach some of your dreams and goals and aspirations. Do you think that it's still possible? Like
you've had this, you've gotten to live in America for a while now and have a good breadth
of understanding here. You've gotten to work in politics. Do you think it's the American
dream is still possible or do you think there's there's things happening these
days that are where we're not helping that along? Well I can tell you I didn't
study this issue, right? I couldn't really give you facts and figures.
What I can tell you is no matter where I go in the world today, people come up to me and say,
Arnold, can you please help me get to America?
So that never has changed.
It doesn't matter to immigrants,
people that want to come here,
they don't know what the political situation,
they don't care if the Democrats are in power
or Republicans in power,
what the Senate says, what the Congress says,
what the governor says, nothing. They just want to come over here. They want to get a shot.
So this is what it is and they have to do it the legal way. So that is the key thing to me.
For sure.
To do it the legal way. So anyway, the bottom line is I think the opportunities are there.
When I go down to Gorge Gym, I see this guy from Africa that was competing in my bodybuilding shows in the Arnold Classic
and was in one of the top three in all that.
Then he became a personal trainer.
He's charging $200 an hour.
He's driving up one day with his blue Bentley.
The next day he's driving up with his red Ferrari.
And I mean, this, this is, this is a guy from Africa that came over here with nothing.
Yeah.
So this is a young kid is like maybe 35 or 40 years old and look at what he does.
So there's trainers down there that are from different countries.
There's people, if you're willing to work, that's why I always say to people, I say, work your ass off.
Don't ever come. This is my big advice to the immigrants. I say, don't ever come over here to just use this country. I say, give something back. Think about that you want to work your ass
off here, you want to educate yourself here, you want to contribute to America here. That's
what you want to do because the very fact that you're allowed to come over here,
you should go and have that mentality
of wanting to give something back.
That's the bottom line.
Amen, man.
And I think that goes to it, even as you're saying that,
Arnold, it's making me think about like even
a relationships that I'm in or business situations.
I should think of most things as that way.
Like, let me give something to this, right?
Whatever this is, if this is a relationship with
a spouse or a girlfriend or a boyfriend or a, if it's a team that I'm on or just a commitment I've
had, I'm going to spend an hour with my son or your, or my mom to do something. Let me give
something to this, right? Let me not just take even this moment for granted, whatever it is,
let me be here and be present and apply myself so that we create something that just
so I'm honoring the fact that I even have this moment in time.
Yes. And let me tell you something that as soon as people realize that they're not self-made,
that there were a lot of people involved in where you are today, A lot of people, you couldn't operate without the engineer,
you couldn't operate without the deal that you got
to do this and blah, blah, blah,
and all this kind of stuff.
You have to recognize that because when you recognize
that you're not self-made, that people have helped you,
that is what makes you think click and say,
I got to now help other people.
I have the responsibility to help other people.
And then you realize how much joy it brings you
when you see that you have an impact
and you can help other people.
That's why we have the Pump Club
and that's why we do the Arnold Classic
and the promotion of bodybuilding
and environmental stuff and the afterschool programs.
I mean, to go to one of this afterschool program
the conventions and to hear the kids' stories,
it just makes you feel so good that you did that. That you raised the money. We have poker tournaments
at my house where we raise like seven, eight million dollars sometimes and then we put this
right into the after-school programs. So this is where the action is and you can do all of that
because as I always say the day is 24 hours and I talk about
great length in my book and it'll be useful I talk about all of those kind of principles of giving
back and having a vision and don't listen to the naysayers and all those kind of things.
Who do you go to for your like your inspiration? Do you have like a coach or a mentor over the
years? Have you had like like you go to Tony Robbins? Do you hire some of these guys who
are really good at this
type of stuff to help you in certain speed bumps in your life?
Well, I would say that I have always had mentors like, I didn't know the
weeders, uh, that they'd helped me and I looked up to them.
Reg Park is something then bodybuilding that I looked up to.
And later on was like Ronald Reagan when he was governor of California,
then became president and Nixon. And people that I looked up to or George Schultz when he was governor of California, then became president and Nixon.
People that I looked up to, or George Schultz, who was secretary of state under Reagan,
that then became my mentor when I became governor and told me about how to work together with
Democrats and Republicans and not just my way or the highway.
Did you get to meet Reagan?
Yeah, for many times.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Wow.
What was he like? I was at the White House. I was invited to state din? Yeah, for many times. Oh, really? Yeah. Yeah. Wow. What was he like?
I was at the White House.
I was invited to state dinners there and everything like that.
They have good food over there?
Say again?
Good food over there.
Huh?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
They know how to cook.
Hell yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But there's, and then also Nixon, I mean, I was down at the Nixon library.
I remember in early nineties and that's when Nixon just without telling me,
called me up on stage and wanted me to give a speech.
So I told him how I became a Nixon fan.
And when I came over here to this country and all that stuff,
he loved it.
He said to me, he says,
oh, you should become governor of California.
You know, it was really great.
So he was one of the guys that always pushed about.
That's awesome.
That's Bob Hope right there.
Yeah, exactly.
I just got back out and did a show in Qatar, Qatar, Qatar.
It was pretty cool.
Yeah.
I happened to just be over there.
Trump was over there speaking too at the same day, but we just did a show for the troops.
Oh yeah, yeah, exactly.
But this is a great thing that you do.
It was awesome.
I tell you, there's nothing that they appreciate more than to go there and do schmooze with them, take photographs with them, or tell them some jokes.
Yes. I remember I did it with Jay Leno. It was hit or miss. There we are right there. Oh man,
look at that. That's what I'm looking at. Look at that team. A couple clue-cluck sands, man. That's
the joke I made. Yeah. Pretty good joke. I think it's good. Do you do that often? Do you do shows?
I did it for a long time and then I've taken a break recently.
For troops.
Yeah. I did it for a long time and then I've taken a break recently, but this really reignited me on it.
I was actually texting a couple friends of mine and saying, let's go do some, just even close bases that are close to us in America,
just whatever we can, let's start to do it a little bit more.
And I think we're going to start to do it more.
So I'm really excited about that.
I feel really lucky.
I mean, my whole job is freedom of speech, right?
So it's like, if people aren't protecting that,
you can't even be a comedian in some countries.
You know, so.
No, of course not.
No, I think it's a great idea.
And of course, I remember that in,
when I was in my height, in my
bodybuilding days, I was invited to go on the aircraft carrier,
Norfolk, Virginia, and to go and train with the sailors and to show them how
to exercise and all that stuff.
And it was fantastic.
I bet they loved that.
It was up there.
And ever since then, I really found it really enjoyable to go.
It's down here.
Then there's San Diego, the Pendleton or any of those military bases.
Or if I go to Seoul, South Korea or the Japan or anywhere I go, Middle East, I
was in Kuwait and visiting the base working out with them at like three, four
in the morning.
Dude, when I work out, they don't give a shit.
I'll tell you that.
I tell you that there's some really serious lifters there.
Yeah, but they do not.
They do not want to see me do anything.
I usually stand on the side and just drink.
I'll have a little bit of a protein shake, but when you,
what about like, like, was it hard with your whole life?
Was it tough to be like, was it ever tough to be a good husband or be a good dad?
Like if, if so much of your job takes like your work side of you, cause I noticed
for me, like I'm not married yet.
I would like to find a wife, but it's hard for me to even find time.
You know, like, is it tough?
Like, were there moments where, because your life gets so big, right?
And you've had a big life.
I mean, there's like you, Arnold, and then the other guy, Hey, Arnold,
he's a fucking drawing, I think.
Right.
So you're the, you're like, the name is yours really.
Like, does it ever get hard to be a parent or something?
Because of how big your-
Let me tell you something.
Everything that you want to do that is really good
and you want to go all out, it's difficult, it's challenging.
But I was very fortunate because I married a woman
that understood that I have to work.
And she didn't complain about it.
So we got together and I understood that right away because of the family she came from.
The Kennedy family, right?
So Maria Schreiber was like, she understood that all of her...
Bobby Kennedy, she related to Bobby Kennedy?
Exactly, yeah. So if it is John F. Kennedy, if it was Bobby Kennedy, senior, you know,
when he ran for president, I mean, her father ran for president and for vice president and
all of this.
So she was used to that everyone has to go out and work.
The energy of it all.
They left the house in the morning and they came back late at night.
And all like, for instance, he then later on, you know, was traveling around the world
for Special Olympics because, and her mother was also a workaholic and so she understood
that and so when I was going on location when we had kids she would go and she would stop
her job in New York the NBC job that she was hosting the morning news and she would stay
home she would stay home and she will stay with the kids.
And so this is why we have four terrific kids that we created together and Patrick, of course,
we're very proud of him. Oh yeah. I love his new show. The show. He did a great job. He did a
fantastic job. And you know, Catherine is fantastic and writes books and all this stuff. And who are
your other two children? Just so we are. Christina and Christopher. Christopher is also in show business. He's, you know,
working for a production company. He reads more scripts than I've ever read in my whole life.
But it's really great to see all the kids. Then I have one son outside the marriage,
which is Joseph. And Joseph is also doing terrific in real estate. So it's a key thing is to really concentrate
on being a participative father when you have kids.
Because you got to go, they want to see you ski
when you go up and say, let's go skiing.
They don't want you to just send them up in the mountains
in the cold weather, where they freeze their butt off.
They want to see you sitting on the chairlift,
go up with the skis and ski with them.
So that's what they did.
So they of course, they hated it when they were kids.
They said, oh dad, let's go in, I want to get a hot jacket.
They said, there is no hot jacket.
They're skiing.
They said, this is ski mountain, not a hot jacket mountain.
So what's the matter with you kids?
You know, and then they were crying on the chair
and the people were going up there on the chairlift and people were skiing down and skiing down for three,
four hours.
And then immediately had the hot chocolate and we had the lunch and all that stuff.
And now when they go up to San Valley and go skiing, they stopped me and they
said, dad, I just want you to know how much I appreciate that you made us ski.
Because now I ski fantastic.
I can go down on any run.
And they think of you And they do it.
It's so big.
That's what I always tell my friends.
I said, don't just go and take pictures of them skiing.
No, you put the skis on, you put the ski boots on and you go and do it.
And the same with playing soccer.
I was playing soccer with my son and always you got to go and
participate in all of this stuff.
And so this is what I believed in.
I went to all the games with my wife of this stuff. And so this is what I believed in. I went to all the games with my wife.
Oh damn.
My God, brother.
Well, any liverwits can make anyone look good.
I guess.
Yeah.
My gosh.
No, but you know what?
I just gathered from so many of your things.
It's just the application of self, right?
And that you have to go get it.
You have to go do this, right?
Yeah. Do you know Bobby pretty good? Bobby Kennedy is a friend of mine.
Yeah. Bobby, I mean, let me tell you something about Bobby. He's a great guy.
Oh, he's one of my favorite guys. I know him from recovery. We go to recovery meetings together.
But think about this for a second. I'm running for governor in 2003.
And then all of a sudden they get a phone call from Bobby,
who I knew very well, and Bobby and Joe Kennedy,
his brother, his older brother,
and they were always really kind of nice to me
and kind and inclusive and stuff like that.
Well, fuck you, you're the damn Terminator.
They gotta be at least horrible.
No, no, but I mean, you know, some people are kind of like,
well, who is this new guy coming into the family?
Oh, I see, especially their family, because it's a prestigious are kind of like, oh, who is this new guy coming into the family type of thing? Oh, I see.
Especially their family because it's a prestigious thing.
That's right.
Yeah.
So, but they were really nice.
So, Bobby calls me and he says, Arnold, you're Republican.
Republican isn't known for the environmental record.
He says, I'm an environmentalist.
He says, yes, you know, I'm the dad of the river keepers and all that stuff is.
And I have a guide that you should have a new team
That can educate you really about the environment. I said think about it. It's really nice to say who is it Terry Taminan?
He says let me send him over to your office
He sent over Terry Taminan. We hit it off right away really well. And the next thing I know is is we're working together
he's part of the team. And then when it became governor, and I think that contributed to me becoming governor, because
I saw this whole idea that I want to be environmentally friendly, I want to reduce
greenhouse gases, I want to get the renewable energy up in California and all of this stuff.
So the next thing I said, I become governor, he becomes now Terry Tamer, and becomes the head of the EPA and all of this.
But this all happened in my knowledge about the environment,
and all this happened because of Bobby Kennedy.
So that's the kind of a guy he is.
I mean, he's like, didn't say, oh, you're Republican,
I'm going to campaign against you.
No, he was 100% on board.
He wanted to wish me good luck,
and he did wish me good luck,
and he wanted me to win, not because I'm a Republican.
He just felt like, Oh, I like Arnold.
I want the good guy to win.
Exactly.
So that's the kind of a guy Bobby is, you know, so I'm, I think the world of him.
Yeah, he's cool.
We had him on the podcast when everybody was thinking he was kind of crazy during
the pandemic and stuff, and he was concerned about just people's health and wellbeing with vaccines and stuff.
We had him on.
And, um, but yeah, I've always known him to be just a neat guy.
You know, he's my friend.
Um, yeah, I'm excited for him.
I'm curious to see what it's like once you get into office.
How can you still keep your beliefs or not?
Or do things get heavily compromised?
Do you feel like?
It is compromised.
You have to. You have to.
You have to compromise.
Because the whole world doesn't think exactly like you.
Remember what Eisenhower said.
Eisenhower said that politics is like the road.
The left, the right is the gutter.
And the center is drivable.
And that's exactly the way it is in politics.
You have to understand that there's a sweet spot.
You know like the teaching golf, hit the sweet spot, or in tennis, they hit the sweet spot,
and all this.
There's a sweet spot to find exactly so you can get a deal made and then you can move
things forward.
It's not exactly your way.
I mean I remember with the infrastructure, I wanted to build a hundred billion dollars
worth of infrastructure, but they only agreed on around $60 billion.
So I didn't get in my way.
With the financial situation, I wanted to wipe out the deficit, and I was not able to
do that with all these Democrats around it.
They love to spend money.
So I was stuck with it.
But the fact of the matter is we could improve the situation and I was able to work together
with the Democrats on environmental issues and infrastructure issues and so many other
healthcare issues, so many other issues, education and all of this stuff.
And we did really fine.
And they had a great time up there being governor of the state of California.
But it's about compromise.
I mean, you've said before that you can't do everything.
You can't do it all by yourself, right?
No, it's not a dictatorship.
You know, so you have two parties,
you've ever, within your own party, they think differently.
So that's, you have to face reality.
The trick is just to be, do not hate the other side
because they think differently.
It's just kind of like figuring out how can we work together
and how can we do something that's really good for the people.
That's the bottom line. They just had, do you think we'll ever have a Republican governor again in California?
Well, you know, if someone has a good program and if someone is organic, I mean, with me,
it was possible because I had a great mentor, number one, which was Pete Wilson, who was a governor
of California, two terms.
And he helped me.
Pete Wilson?
Yeah, Pete Wilson.
Yeah.
And he helped me, you know, with the race a lot.
And then I also was organic because, you know, people saw that I did not come out of nowhere
where I always said I went from acting to politics.
I mean, I was working with Special Olympics for decades, going around the world to help
Special Olympics and to get recognition for them and to be able to get jobs and to be able to live
everywhere they want and to get into sports, Special Olympics sports programs, powerlifting.
So I was always fighting for equality,
including in South Africa with Nelson Mandela,
we were there together fighting for special Olympics.
So the people in California saw all of that.
And also me starting the afterschool programs
and having an initiative that I went to the people
a year before in 2002,
and the people voted 57% in favor of that initiative to help
after school programs. So I was already in there and I was working with President Bush
being the chairman of the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports. So I was already
giving back and giving back and giving back. So when I said now I'm not interested anymore
in just doing another movie, I'm more interested anymore in just doing another movie.
I'm more interested in getting the state of California back on its feet because we had
blackouts with huge deficits.
The illegalists were getting driver's license.
There was all kinds of crazy stuff that was going on here.
And I said to myself, the Indian gaming, they didn't pay taxes and they did all the gaming
and made billions of dollars.
And their workers' compensation costs were gaming and made billions of dollars and their workers
compensation costs were high and people were moving out with their businesses in California.
I said I will bring California back no matter how many people were campaigning for Gray Davis who
was governor then you know Clinton came out and campaigned for him Gore came out and John Kerry
came out Al Sharpton all of those guys came out to campaign for him. I said to Bush, I said, no, no, don't come out.
I don't need that.
It's between me and the voters.
And so I convinced the California people and that's how I became governor.
That's why I got a huge majority of votes.
And it was organic.
So many of the guys come from from real estate and they say, well, I want to be governor.
I have the money now.
And people don't buy in on that stuff.
Right, you can't just buy it.
I don't think you can just buy it.
I mean, you had Bloomberg tried to do it a few years ago,
it didn't work.
Yeah, you have to be real, you know,
and you have to be able to have a vision.
Remember again, it goes back to the book, you know,
be useful.
You have, rule number one is you have to have a clear vision.
You can't just say, I want to be governor.
What is your vision?
If someone says to me,
he said, what is your vision of New California?
Right.
You know, remember that Teddy Kennedy,
the problem he had when they asked him, Roger Mudd,
asked him when he announced to run for president,
and Roger Mudd asked him, he says,
why do you want to be president?
Teddy couldn't answer it.
You know what I'm saying?
So he was like, well, my
mother rose, she always taught us to give something back. And so it didn't work. People
didn't buy it. And even though he was a great public servant, he did a great job. But he
couldn't sell it. So you have to come out of the gate and really be very forceful and
know and let the people know, I know what I want want to do and I'm going to fight for you.
Let's fight for me. I don't want to be a political hack. I don't want to be just another
Republican that wins. No, I want to fight for you. So that was the whole theme of the campaign.
They have like, they just had where they found like 20 something billion dollars that was like,
it was supposed to be earmarked for homeless help in California that went missing, right?
How does money go missing once you're in these places?
Do you think is it just like people, let's just say Newsome confronted at press conference
about 24 billion spent on tackling homelessness.
Like how does, how does stuff like that?
And not, it didn't have to be this specifically, but once you're in office and you see these huge amounts of money, how does stuff like that just go by the wayside where it gets lost or missing hypothetically, do you think?
Well, first of all, let me just say none of those politicians, I would want to run my company.
Yeah.
I would want to run my company. None of those companies, none of those politicians, I would like to hand over my checkbook, my
bank account and say, you manage it now.
Right?
So that's where it starts.
So they're not that smart when it comes to solving problems.
And so I can totally understand how $24 billion is missing
because it's wasted.
They cannot even show it.
They cannot even have any accountability.
But this has been going on for 20 years now.
We're not talking about just for the last few years.
This has been going on and on.
Everyone has been complaining about the homeless,
but they don't create, they don't really tell you
that this was created by the politicians,
the homelessness. Did Reagan create it though? No, no, it was created by having people go and say,
we don't want no growth in California. So when you have 19, when I came over, it was 19, 20 million
people in California. Well, they'd be at six lane highways. So now when you go to 40 million people in California. Well, they built six lane highways.
So now when you go to 40 million people,
you would know mathematically now you need 12 lane highways,
meaning six lanes and then on top of it,
you build another freeway, right?
So you don't have to traffic congestion,
but that's not what they did.
Then when you go from 20 to 40 million people,
then you need twice as many houses.
You need twice as many apartment buildings. You need twice as much of everything.
Schools and everything. They didn't. They didn't take care of them because the
environmentalists thought that if we say no growth, then no one will come.
But in the meantime, no one gives a shit about that. They come anyway.
And then they somehow then live three people in one apartment or five people in one apartment, or sometimes, you know, workers that sometimes live 10 people.
Oh, yeah, they'll really be laying on each other's backs.
Then what happens now is when you have a limited amount of housing, now the prices rise.
So now when the prices go up, the value of the apartment building goes up.
So the unit that used to cost $600 now costs $3,000 a month.
But the salaries, the wages didn't go up accordingly.
So now you have people that are economically homeless.
They cannot afford paying for their rent anymore.
So this is created by the politicians. And now remember what Einstein said, the people that created the problem cannot solve it.
So they are doing the same thing over, which is another thing Einstein said, if you try
to do the same thing over and over again and expect different results, that's the definition
of insanity.
And it feels like that's what we're living in these days.
So this is what we're dealing with here.
So we have, you know, the city here is not able to manage with this whole thing.
On a state level, we are not able to manage this whole thing.
So it's like I had to go.
I mean, we had the homeless veterans camping out in front of the Veterans Administration
up there in Westwood.
Oh yeah, right over there, 405 and Santa Monica.
In front, right in front of there for years.
They're camping out there and no one is helping them.
So, I went and I started making a deal and I said, can we not put inside some houses?
Little houses.
And they said, yes.
And we started, I donated the money and we started building houses.
And since then there's now hundreds of houses inside the Veterans Administration and the homeless are gone because they wanted to help
the Veterans Administration.
But it took a while and the city kept saying, oh, it is too difficult to do.
And this is really challenging to do.
I said, watch that.
Within two months, we had those houses there and we created homes for 25 people so they
could move in.
Just to show to the city, it can be done.
Don't give me this, it can't be done.
Anything can be done if there's a will to it with the whole thing.
Amen.
I have two quick questions for you just about people.
Thank you so much for your time today, Arnold.
Thanks for the inspiration.
I feel like this has been an inspirational conversation
for me.
You never know what certain conversations
are going to be like.
Thanks for your contributions to entertainment
and to just, it's evident that you, you know,
you are the American dream.
And it made me feel like it is still possible,
which I don't know if I even felt like that
when I started this conversation.
Did you ever get to meet Michael Landon before? No. You didn't? I love him. He was one of my
favorites. And did you ever get to meet Michael Jackson before? Yeah. What was he like? Do you
have any good like a cool story about him? Really nice man. I mean, he was very nice. He came to my
trailer several times when I was filming over there in Universal Lot, the studio. And then we had also dinner several times.
I remember one time at Katzenberg, maybe it was even Katzenberg that organized it.
I cannot remember anymore.
But I mean, yeah, I mean, he was a wonderful, wonderful guy.
Would he tell stories and stuff like regular people?
Because they always make him seem so quiet.
No, no, he is quiet.
And it could be because he wanted to protect his voice.
And he was odd.
Yeah.
No two ways about that.
But he was very, very nice and very interesting and fascinated
about different things.
And he was, many times, he also felt
like you're talking to a child.
Oh, I can see that for sure.
You know, he would shift into this thing
where it where things that
that children are really into,
you know, kind of like riots in Disney
or something like that that he would talk about
that really interested him.
And so it was kind of an interesting thing,
but you can see the way he grew up
and with the amount of fame that he had, how difficult it must have
been for him to handle all that.
Oh, I can't even, yeah.
To be this genius of a musician.
I mean, it's like unbelievable.
And it's sad that he got addicted to this kind of, you know, sleeping thing.
Propofol, I think, or something.
Yeah.
And then took too much of it and passed away.
It was a huge loss for the world because he was just such a fantastic entertainer.
Yeah.
Yeah. I'll see his children every now and then I cross paths with his daughter
every once in a while.
Um, anything else that you want to show him?
I think it's been a good conversation.
Do you guys feel like that?
I think that the key thing is, is, uh, you know, that we pump up, um, you
know, that while you're hearing this interview,
that you show every 10 minutes, a trailer of a FUBAR.
And then while I'm talking,
you show a little bit of clips again,
and then a little bit of that.
Let me help you with the editing, okay?
Hey, I promise you this, I will certainly support it.
And I'll watch some more of it.
I'm gonna get some of my friends to watch it. We grew up watching.
Just so many movies, the lady with the three breasts or that one. She was like, God,
Oh yeah. From total recall. Yeah, exactly. I recalled those a lot, brother, you know,
and I totaled them up three every time. You know, but thank you for that. That was the first
breast I was ever allowed to see a little bit. But thank you so much, man. Absolutely. It was
great. And remember, I hope this is not the last time that we do little bit. But thank you so much, man. Absolutely, it was great.
And remember, I hope this is not the last time
that we do it again sometimes.
Oh no, I would love to do this again.
That was fun.
I really enjoyed the conversation.
Thank you so much.
One more, just say something nice
about each one of your children
so one day they'll be able to see this really fast.
Whoa, I'm proud of all my children.
I'm very proud of Catherine,
who has three kids now
herself, and who's writing books and she's the greatest mother. She's just
like her mother, Maria, that was a really fantastic mother. And I'm very proud of
her. I'm proud of Christina, who is also, you know, into producing and doing, you
know, TV shows, documentaries, and all that. Here in Los Angeles? Yeah. And then maybe, of course, Patrick Schwarzenegger, you know.
Yeah, I just saw his new show.
He's doing really well. I'm so happy that his acting career is taking off.
This is something that he really was very passionate about always.
Christopher is doing a great job. I mean, he just lost 150 pounds.
No way. Yeah. So he just lost 150 pounds. No way.
Yeah. So he used to weigh 350. He's now down like 210 or something like that.
Oh, he must be feeling so much healthier, huh?
He feels really great. Works out in Gorge Gym every day and I know that I'm really proud of him.
You get to see him there sometimes?
Yes, I see him all the time.
Oh, that's awesome.
And then, you know, Joseph is a fantastic human being.
He's in the real estate, he's into acting, and he's going to the training.
He works out all the time.
So I'm really proud of all of them.
Yeah.
Well, and none of them is in the drugs.
None of them is the alcohol and any of those things.
So it's really fantastic to see them.
And even I have a nephew here. I mean, that is really fantastic to see them. And even I have also a nephew here.
I mean, he's really fantastic.
Patrick Knapp.
Patrick Knapp is his name?
Yes, Patrick Knapp, exactly.
That's Catherine.
You want to have Catherine's kids?
He's my entertainment lawyer.
I mean, so I brought him over from Austria because my brother passed away.
So this is Patrick.
This is your brother's son?
Yes, my brother's son.
No way.
So he was three years old when
my brother passed away. And then he went to school over there and everything. Then they brought him
over to also go Santa Monica College, go to UCLA, go to Hastings Law School. That's your path Santa
Monica to UCLA. Does he remind you of your brother? Oh yeah, yeah, he reminds me a lot of my brother.
Yeah, that's awesome. I bet your brother's super proud of you, man. And thank you so Arnold for just all your contributions and for your time today. My pleasure. Yep. You guys go watch FUBAR Oh, but when I reach that ground I'll share this peace of mind I found
I can feel it in my bones
But it's gonna take a little...