Patrons dance at Club Bounce in Long Beach, California. The
club is specifically aimed at attracting overweight
individuals. Photo Philip Scott Andrews/AP.
Move over, it's Saturday night at Club Bounce and people
are bouncing onto the dance floor in a big, big way.
These are big, big people, all dressed to the nines and many
tipping the scales at 113kg, maybe 136kg.
That's because this expansive nightclub a couple blocks from
the Pacific Ocean, with its flashing lights, friendly
atmosphere and wall-rattling hip-hop sounds, caters
specifically to fat people.
That's right, fat people. Not just any fat people, either,
but fat people who are proud to call themselves fat people.
People who joke that they are part of the new Fat is Phat
movement.
"Self-conscious? No! Not at all," laughs Monique Lopez, a
curvaceous woman of 23 as she arrives in a tight, black dress
and heels. "I was like, `I'm going to Club Bounce tonight.
I'm going to wear my shortest skirt."' (Which she did.)
The movement for equal rights for plus-sized people is
nothing new of course. The National Association to Advance
Fat Acceptance, with chapters around the country, was founded
40 years ago. A nonprofit group, it advocates that everyone
be treated equally regardless of size, arguing that we don't
live in a one-size-fits-all world.
But what has been slower coming, fat advocates say, are
places like Club Bounce, where people who might have some
trouble getting past the velvet ropes at other night spots
because of their size are made to feel like they fit right
in.
"When you're not what they consider ideal, you know, and
you're out there trying to get your dance on at those other
places, you get the looks, the stares. But not here.
Everything's accepted here," says Vanessa Gray of Long Beach,
an attractive 30-something woman who acknowledges jovially
that after giving birth to three children, "I've got a little
more meat on my bones."
Such clubs are still a relatively new phenomenon, however,
with a handful scattered across California, mainly in coastal
cities from San Diego to San Francisco.
"The whole thing really started on the Internet, with
clubhouse parties organized online," says Kathleen Divine,
who runs another Southern California plus-size club, the
Butterfly Lounge. "Now you see a lot more large people out in
public, not hiding behind their keyboards anymore."
A website for "big beautiful women" sponsors an annual "Vegas
Bash," for example, and there are similar gatherings in
cities like Atlanta and Seattle.
But veteran fat activist Lynn McAfe of the Council On Size
and Weight Discrimination would like to see more clubs.
"It's nice to have a place to go where you can do a little
flirting and maybe bring your thin sister or somebody from
work who isn't fat, and they'll be in your world for awhile,"
says McAfe, a pioneer of the fat advocacy movement.
"That's an amazing experience for a lot of people who aren't
fat, to spend a day or night in a world of fat people."
Not that every large person prefers to be called fat,
especially by someone who isn't.
Lisa Marie Garbo, who opened Club Bounce five years ago, says
she prefers plus-sized or larger-framed.
"But I don't think fat is a bad word anymore," she adds. "I
think a lot of people embrace it now."
Garbo, a vivacious, 40-year-old blonde partial to flamboyant
outfits of tight-fitting pants and low-cut tops, said she
opened the club for herself and others who were tired of
being "the only fat girl at the local nightclub."
The club, with a capacity of 400, attracts relatively equal
numbers of men and women, although Garbo says about
three-quarters of the women tend to be heavy, while only
about a quarter of the men are.
Some club-goers, like Chad Koyanagi, started out big, then
slimmed down. Others, like Garbo herself, have seen their
weight go up and down over the years. Still others say
they're happy the way they are.
Like a lot of heavy people, Koyanagi says he started dropping
by the club after a friend he met on a social networking site
kept after him to get out of the house. Painfully shy at
first, the 30-year-old eventually began to fit in and ended
up shedding 23 kilograms. Although he's no longer hefty
enough to fit the club's BHM profile (Big Handsome Man), he
says he's made too many friends to stop coming.
But while not all club-goers are overweight, the very nature
of such venues has led some to question whether they are
encouraging people to remain fat in a society where,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
one-third of adults are already obese.
"I'm not a gain-weight advocate or anything like that," says
Garbo, who adds she has struggled with her own weight since
doctors put her on steroids as a child to treat her asthma.
"My message to people is live your life no matter what size
you are."
Although obesity remains a serious problem, with links to
diabetes, heart disease and other health issues, says
sociologist Karen Sternheimer, creating a place where people
can feel good about themselves can build self-esteem, which
in turn can prompt people to do something about their weight.
"As the country gets heavier and ultimately unhealthier, in
many instances the problem is people feeling bad about
themselves, and feeling bad about themselves doesn't motivate
people to lose weight," says Sternheimer, author of
Connecting Social Problems and Popular Culture.
What does motivate people, she said, is starting with a
positive outlook of accepting who you are, then working from
there to change your appearance in whatever way you want.
"Anything that helps people feel better about themselves,"
she said, "there's something positive to that."
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