- trivia -

Nadia didn’t just raise the bar; she became the standard.

579151901_820234757430006_2107432054805170686_n.jpg


The scoreboard said "1.00" and the crowd gasped—then they realized the Olympic system had just malfunctioned because it couldn't display perfection.

July 18, 1976. Montreal Forum.

Eighteen thousand spectators packed the arena for women's gymnastics at the Summer Olympics. The Romanian team had brought several competitors, including a tiny fourteen-year-old girl who stood barely five feet tall and weighed eighty-six pounds.

Her name was Nadia Comăneci. Most of the world had never heard of her.

That was about to change forever.

Nadia approached the uneven bars with an expression that would become iconic: no smile, no visible nervousness, just absolute focus. She'd been training for this exact moment since age six, when legendary Romanian coach Béla Károlyi spotted her doing cartwheels in a schoolyard and recruited her to his elite gymnastics program.

For eight years, she'd trained relentlessly—six hours a day, six days a week. She'd sacrificed everything resembling a normal childhood. No birthday parties with friends. No casual playtime. No teenage social life. Just gymnastics, gymnastics, gymnastics.

Her hands were ...

MORE>

Note - I believe that pic isn't from Montreal but rather from a later meet
 
"Her name was Nadia Comăneci." #41
That was years before the VCR. I believe I saw that as it was broadcast in New York / ET.
It was during the Cold War, suspicions such super-humans would flood the Soviet Union with super-humans that would then take over the world.
 
584411426_692048883967323_2358601289316544021_n.jpg



Dallas, Texas. 1950s.

Bette Nesmith Graham was a single mother working as an executive secretary at Texas Bank & Trust, trying to support her young son on a secretary's salary that barely covered rent and groceries.

She was drowning—not just financially, but in something that seemed impossibly small: typing mistakes.

In the era of carbon copies and manual typewriters, one mistake meant disaster. One wrong letter and you'd have to retype the entire page. Hours of work destroyed by a single slip of the finger.

Bette watched the bank's sign painters touch up their work when they made errors. They didn't start over—they just painted over the mistake.

And she thought: Why can't ....

MORE>
 
Back
Top