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Post by Admin on Jul 18, 2021 21:06:24 GMT
Lustful Olympic athletes should think twice before making the bed rock in Tokyo. The world’s best sports competitors are set to spend their nights on cardboard beds — allegedly designed to collapse under the weight of fornicators to discourage sex amid COVID-19. Olympic officials — who already warned 2021 Games participants to avoid two-person push-ups because of the coronavirus — have set up 18,000 of the cardboard beds in the notoriously sex-crazed athletes’ village, according to Dezeen magazine. “Beds to be installed in Tokyo Olympic Village will be made of cardboard, this is aimed at avoiding intimacy among athletes,” American distance runner Paul Chelimo tweeted. “Beds will be able to withstand the weight of a single person to avoid situations beyond sports,” Chelimo cracked. “I see no problem for distance runners, even 4 of us can do.” Olympic athletes have never shied away from hanky panky, but officials have warned it could spell particular trouble this year amid the pandemic. The 100 percent recyclable cardboard beds were designed by the Japanese company Airweave. But officials are apparently aware it’s going to take a lot more than the makeshift berths to keep players out of the pole position.
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Post by Admin on Jul 29, 2021 18:42:24 GMT
INSIDE THE OLYMPIC VILLAGE - Full Tour Walkthrough
Go behind the scenes inside the 2021 Tokyo Olympic Village with Olympic Track and Field Coach Dane Miller in a full walkthrough tour of the dormitories and how strong these cardboard beds actually are!
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Post by Admin on Jul 30, 2021 22:06:04 GMT
Tokyo2020 Olympic Games Village Restaurant On this video, I’m going to be showing you the Restaurant at Tokyo2020 Olympic Village . It’s a big restaurant, so this video is a little bit long because I want you all to see everything inside. We have to put on our Face Mask in the restaurant! The only time we are free to remove it is while seated and eating. Guess the Tennis Superstar I met there!!
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Post by Admin on Jul 30, 2021 22:59:46 GMT
An Israeli Olympian on Thursday apologized for posting a video online that showed him with eight others jumping on a so-called anti-sex bed in Tokyo's athletes' village until it broke.
The now-deleted video in which the athletes tested the strength of the recyclable cardboard bed frame was uploaded by Ben Wanger, a U.S.-born baseball player on the Israeli Olympic team, to his TikTok account on Monday.
"I'd like to really apologize to anyone offended by this video," Wanger said in a video clip sent to the Japanese media by the Israeli Olympic Committee. "We meant no disrespect and just wanted to show off how effective and sturdy the beds are in the Olympic village."
"We actually enjoy sleeping on these beds and think they are a great and sustainable option for future Olympics," Wanger said, adding he and his team mates feel appreciative that Japan has done an "exceptional job" in hosting athletes in the village and thanked it for its hospitality.
In the original video, one, then two, then three, and up to a total of nine athletes jumped on the single bed until it broke. The beds were designed to support weights of up to 200 kilograms, according to manufacturer Airweave. The act drew angry responses in Japan.
"It's not funny at all. As a Japanese, it makes me very sad," said one internet comment.
"I don't understand why anyone would destroy something belonging to someone else," another said.
Many other athletes have taken to social media sites to share their opinions on the incident.
American distance runner Paul Chelimo wrote on Twitter on July 17 that the beds were "aimed at preventing intimacy among athletes." Chelimo, among others, dubbed them anti-sex beds.
The following day, Irish gymnast Rhys McClenaghan debunked the rumor that the beds easily break by filming himself doing a test jump on the bed on Twitter.
"In today's episode of fake news at the Olympic Games, the beds are meant to be anti-sex. They're made of cardboard, yes. But they are apparently intended to break under sudden movements. It's fake news," McClenaghan said in a video that has been viewed more than 3.8 million times.
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Post by Admin on Jul 31, 2021 5:27:03 GMT
The whole world watches the planet's best athletes compete for the Olympic games. From the epic clashes on the tennis court to the high-flying spectacle of competitive gymnastics, the Olympic Games broadcast every second of the action to the audience at home.
But what about the things you don't see?
When they're not competing on the world stage in front of hundreds of cameras, the Olympic athletes stay at the Olympic Village. That's where they eat, sleep, prepare for their competitions, and socialize. But what really goes on inside these mega-compounds? Here's a look at what's really happening inside the Olympic Village.
#Olympics #OlympicVillage #OlympicGames
COVID-19 has spread at the Olympic Village | 0:00 Not so luxurious | 1:12 Tons of food | 2:06 Celebrations galore | 2:52 Athletes aren't required to stay | 3:43 The inside look | 4:33 Buffet ban | 5:28 Displaying country pride | 6:26 Safe intimacy | 7:14 Stressed out in the Village | 8:11 Each Village is unique | 9:05 Socializing with peers | 10:05 What happens to the old Villages? | 10:59
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