BUSINESS PROFILE:
Personal trainer promotes noncompetitive fitness
Fit is not perfect. That philosophy seems incongruous coming from
personal fitness trainer Ofer Gabriel. After all, it was his
shirtless bodybuilder pose behind Phyllis Diller on the April 1987
cover of Palm Springs Life that catapulted him to celebrity status.
A flood of media attention followed that issue - even a rumor
Gabriel and Diller were dating and calling them "Beauty and the
Beast." Gabriel might have been another Sylvester Stallone - whom he
trained for Rambo III - but he declined movie offers and stayed in
Palm Springs to continue practicing what he believed in.
What he believes is that "fit is not perfect," and striving for the
"Baywatch" look is the wrong reason to train.
"Everybody is different," Gabriel says, "Fitness is a
selfimprovement sport."
That is why Gabriel has offered strictly one-on-one personal
training since 1989. At his OG Studios in Palm Springs, clients work
out by appointment. They share the 3,000-squarefoot gym with no more
than three other clients who have their own trainers. They don't
have to feel intimidated, be competitive, share equipment or guess
how to use the machines properly.
New clients first receive a free consultation with Gabriel to
discuss their goals, needs, physical limitations and personality to
match them with a compatible trainer. They may purchase from 12 to
100 or more sessions, with prices ranging from $40 to $55 an hour
session.
Workouts must be scheduled by appointment. That policy ensures no
more than four people are working out at one time. It also helps
personal trainers set schedules and creates "a commitment" for
clients, which Gabriel believes is one of the keys to achieving
fitness goals.
Gabriel got involved in training when a doctor recommended exercises
for the then 18-year-old's severe bronchitis. Living in his native
Israel, Gabriel began lifting weights with an American marine. It
improved his breathing capacity, and before long he was
bronchitis-free.
In early 1985, Gabriel left Israel for America. "I wanted to expand
my knowledge, and I knew this was the only place to do it. I loved
everything about America," he says.
Well, almost everything. He says New York reminded him too much of
Israel, so he moved west to Palm Springs, where he had relatives.
Gabriel trained clients in a gym above the Palm Springs Lanes
bowling alley, at the Court Connection. He cleaned the place in the
morning, trained in the afternoon and attended business classes at
College of the Desert in the evening. One-on-one training was in its
infancy, only known among Hollywood stars, Gabriel says.
"I had a goal all the time. I was very determined, very
disciplined," Gabriel says. He succeeded by forming OG Personal
Fitness Studios in 1987 while still attending COD. In 1989, he
opened for business on East Palm Canyon Drive. The Palm Springs Life
cover and subsequent notoriety brought him Hollywood clients,
including a three-times-aweek visit to Frank and Barbara Sinatra.
Today, he has cut back on personal clients but often lectures on
fitness at senior centers. He also owns a personal perfume. Gabriel
used focus groups and worked with a scientist friend who helped
concoct the fragrance - called OG. Gabriel describes the scent as
alluring, seductive and having vanilla tones. "The funny thing," he
says, "is that it doesn't smell good on me."
No matter. All 600 bottles, consigned to stores locally and in Las
Vegas, sold in a year. Gabriel says he will develop another new
fragrance next year, though he'll never be a onefragrance man.
Copyright Desert Publication, Inc. and Sharon Apfelbaum Aug 13, 2002
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights
Reserved
|
|