Connect with us

Fitness

How Suzanne Somers got FIRED from Three’s Company for asking for equal pay… then got the last laugh after finding huge success as ThighMaster fitness guru: A look back at her career following her death at 76

Published

on

How Suzanne Somers got FIRED from Three’s Company for asking for equal pay… then got the last laugh after finding huge success as ThighMaster fitness guru: A look back at her career following her death at 76
  • Suzanne Somers was fired from Three’s Company after asking to be paid the same wages as her male co-star, John Ritter
  • However, she’d go on to make $300 million as a spokeswoman for ThighMaster
  • A look back at her life and career following her death at 76 

Suzanne Somers has died at the age of 76, two days shy of her 77th birthday. 

Advertisement

The Three’s Company star passed away following a relapse of breast cancer. 

Here, we’ll be taking a look back at her life and storied career, from her start as Chrissy Snow on Three’s Company to playing the matriarch on Step by Step. 

Also known for her work as a fitness guru, Suzanne also helped popularize the ThighMaster when she served as a spokeswoman for the fitness machine. 

In addition to acting, the blonde beauty was a model, author, mother and wife.  

In memoriam: How Suzanne Somers went from Three’s Company star to ThighMaster fitness guru: A look back at her career following her death at 76

You better work: The beloved sitcom starlet made $300 million as a ThighMaster spokeswoman

You better work: The beloved sitcom starlet made $300 million as a ThighMaster spokeswoman 

Three’s Company was Suzanne’s breakthrough role in 1977, with the California born stunner playing Chrissy the secretary, a stereotypical dumb blonde who shared an apartment with John Ritter’s culinary student character Jack Tripper and Joyce DeWitts’ Janet Wood, a florist. 

Advertisement

However, Suzanne would ultimately be fired from the show in 1980 after requesting a pay increase that was comparable to John’s salary of $150,000 an episode. 

After the network refused her request — offering a meager $5,000 dollars more. 

The fitness maven’s husband, Alan Hamel, recounted to The Hollywood Reporter at the time that ‘The night before we went in to renegotiate, I got a call from a friend who had connections high up at ABC and he said, ‘They’re going to hang a nun in the marketplace and the nun is Suzanne.’ 

After Suzanne was fired from the show that made her a star, she worked gigs in Las Vegas, even posing in Playboy for the paycheck. 

However, she found her moneymaker in 1990 — the ThighMaster. 

Advertisement

The American Graffiti star went on to represent the workout tool in informercials, in addition to selling them herself. 

She told CNBC that she stopped counting how many ThighMasters she sold after the ’10 million’ milestone, later revealing on the Hollywood Raw podcast with Dax Holt and Adam Glyn that she had pulled in ‘$300 million,’ in ThighMaster sales over the years. 

When asked by CNBC why she felt her sales technique was so successful, Suzanne humbly replied, ‘I sell to my age group, that’s what I know.’

Business babe: Instead of letting herself fall to the wayside after being fired from Three's Company, Suzanne built her own empire on a throne of ThighMasters; seen in 2018

Business babe: Instead of letting herself fall to the wayside after being fired from Three’s Company, Suzanne built her own empire on a throne of ThighMasters; seen in 2018 

Golden girl: The enterprising actress revealed on the Hollywood Raw podcast with Dax Holt and Adam Glyn that she had raked in $300 million in ThighMaster sales since she started hawking them back in 1990; seen in 2019

Golden girl: The enterprising actress revealed on the Hollywood Raw podcast with Dax Holt and Adam Glyn that she had raked in $300 million in ThighMaster sales since she started hawking them back in 1990; seen in 2019 

Rest in peace: The sitcom starlet would also go on to be cast as the matriarch in Step by Step in 1991 following her firing from Three's Company in 1980; seen in 2020

Rest in peace: The sitcom starlet would also go on to be cast as the matriarch in Step by Step in 1991 following her firing from Three’s Company in 1980; seen in 2020 

Staying strong: The actress and business mogul battled recurring bouts of breast cancer ever since her first diagnosis in 2000; seen in 2017

Staying strong: The actress and business mogul battled recurring bouts of breast cancer ever since her first diagnosis in 2000; seen in 2017 

She added that she respected the fans who purchased products from her, noting ‘Always tell the truth…The public is smart, and they can smell BS.’

Acting-wise, Suzanne found career success in 1991 when she was cast as Carole Foster-Lambert, the matriarch of the blended family on the hit sitcom Step by Step. 

Advertisement

She battled bouts of skin and breast cancer over the years, prior to her death on October 14. 

Noticing that her fans were concerned about her back in August, Suzanne posted about her ordeal with her latest cancer relapse, writing ‘This is not new territory for me. I know how to put on my battle gear and I’m a fighter.’

Advertisement

Fitness

Aldi’s new fitness range includes an exercise bike for £79.99

Published

on

Aldi’s new fitness range includes an exercise bike for £79.99

If you want some kit to help you hit your fitness goals in the new year, Aldi (of all places) might be the best place to look thanks to its new sports and leisure range.

While I’ve long since stopped being surprised by the contents of its middle aisle, I was impressed by how affordable the products are. There’s an exercise bike for just £79.99, yoga mats for £5.49, and a selection of resistance bands for only £2.49 each, hitting stores from 29 December.

An exercise bike for less than £100 is a rarity, and though I’m yet to test the range, all the hallmarks of a solid product are there – perhaps this is why Aldi has limited purchases to one per customer. The bike has a simple LCD to display basic metrics, a belt-driven 6kg flywheel, a sturdy steel frame and a centralised knob for adjusting the resistance.

(Aldi)

But, as a fitness writer, the most exciting inclusion for me is the free weights – you’ll be amazed how much you can do with just a single kettlebell and a few foundational exercises. If you’re looking to exercise at home in the new year, sending your health, fitness and strength levels soaring in the process, I think these should be your first port of call.

Advertisement

From 2 January (these specific items are running a little behind schedule), you can pick up a 6kg or 8kg kettlebell for £7.99, and a 10kg or 12kg kettlebell for £12.99, which is incredibly cheap compared to the competition – Amazon’s 6kg kettlebell costs a around £14, at the time of writing.

Don’t expect a cast iron build for this price. These ‘bells have a plastic body and are filled with sand, but they still have a wide handle for kettlebell swings and an ergonomic shape suitable for explosive exercises like cleans. They’re also priced so reasonably you might consider picking up a few weight options, or an equally weighted pair for more versatility.

(Aldi)

If you’re after a metal finish, you’ll find it in the adjustable dumbbell set, which costs £19.99. Each set comes with a central steel bar, a selection of 2kg and 1kg cast iron weight plates and a couple of spring collars to lock them into place.

Like the kettlebells, it might be worth picking up a pair to widen your training horizons. Then you can adjust the weight of the dumbbells to suit different strength training exercises, helping you build muscle at home. Or, if you want a set weight dumbbell for more dynamic workouts like HIIT classes, you can pick up a 5kg rubber-coated pair for the same price.

Advertisement

The range is available in-store from 29 December. So, if you’re after a bargain, you’ll have to be quick. Then the only challenge is carrying your new weights home.

Continue Reading

Fitness

How much should you exercise to actually lose weight?

Published

on

How much should you exercise to actually lose weight?

Two and a half hours of physical exercise per week may be essential for achieving any significant reduction in body weight, a new review of studies has found.

The review, published in the journal JAMA Network Open on Thursday, analysed previously conducted clinical trials probing the effect of exercise on weight loss.

It found that doing about 30 minutes of exercise a week was linked to only a modest reduction in body weight, body fat measures, and waist circumference among adults with obesity.

However, aerobic exercise exceeding 150 minutes per week, at moderate intensity or greater, was more likely to achieve clinically important reductions in weight-loss parameters.

Advertisement
Adult with obesity practicing running
Adult with obesity practicing running (University Of Granada)

Aerobic exercise is any type of physical activity that raises a person’s heart rate and gets them moving and sweating for a sustained period of time.

Previous studies have shown this type of cardio exercise provides a range of benefits when coupled with a healthy diet, enabling people to think more clearly, and even protect against cognitive decline with age.

Some previous studies have estimated the optimal minimum period of exercise at between 30 and 45 minutes.

As little as 30 minutes of aerobic exercise has been linked to significantly better performance on cognitive quizzes.

One study showed that about 30 minutes of treadmill walking for 10 consecutive days may significantly reduce depression.

But the exact amount of optimal exercise needed for weight loss has been unclear.

Advertisement

Health guidelines suggest that at least 150 minutes a week of aerobic exercise at moderate intensity is key to achieving meaningful weight loss of about 2 to 3kg. Some studies suggest a moderate intensity physical activity of about 225 to 420 minutes per week is required for weight loss of 5 to 7.5 kg.

Being overweight surpasses smoking as Australia’s leading health risk

The new study assessed data from over 100 clinical trials examining the effect of exercise over a duration of at least eight weeks on overweight or obese adults.

Researchers found that 30 minutes of aerobic exercise per week may enable adults who are overweight or have obesity to “slightly reduce” body weight.

However, they found the “greatest, clinically important” improvement from aerobic exercise of over 150 minutes per week.

“Aerobic training at least 150 minutes per week may be needed to achieve important reductions in waist circumference and body fat,” they said in the review.

Advertisement

“Longer durations of aerobic exercise may be associated with more beneficial weight or waist circumference outcomes.”

Continue Reading

Fitness

Why you should do strength training at 70: try these exercises

Published

on

Why you should do strength training at 70: try these exercises

A decline in health and fitness isn’t inevitable once you cross into your seventies. Just take look at the recent snaps of Pierce Brosnan — age 70 — shirt off in the wilds of Yellowstone National Park. Or think of Angela Rippon, 79, high-kicking it on Strictly; Helen Mirren, 78, on the red carpet; or the verve of Bruce Springsteen, playing a three-hour set in Hyde Park, London, in the summer at the age of 73. These are just four examples of a host of septuagenarians and octogenarians who have demonstrated that vitality is possible at any age — if you’re prepared to work for it.

Skeletal muscle mass and strength decline more rapidly as we age and can affect physical performance, but this

Continue Reading

Trending