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PUMA x Balenciaga FW25 Nods a True Demna Staple: The Tracksuit

PUMA x Balenciaga FW25 Nods a True Demna Staple: The Tracksuit

Hypebeast4 days ago

Balenciagahas officially launched its collaboration withPUMA, originally teased last March during the brand'sParis Fashion WeekFW25 runway show. The tie-up, part ofDemna's second-to-last Balenciaga collection, reiterates the tracksuit as a central archetype in the designer's language — one that seeks to subvert long-held ideas of luxury, all with an ironic wink.
Theearlier runway presentationwas a tame reprisal of the tenured creative director's lexicon: a toned-down mix of classic and bold-shouldered tailoring, normcore numbers, and form-fitting sportswear dominated by a largely grayscale palette. However, towards the middle of the show, PUMA's inclusion initiated a shift in tone, bringing deep blue and primary red into play and spotlighting Demna's affinity for tracksuits and sweatsuits.
In addition to crested football training sets, logo-taped tracksuit separates, and 90s-inspired windbreakers, PUMA's contributions included standard logo caps, socks, gloves, and a PUMA x Balenciaga shopping bag. The collection is also topped with multiple colorways and distressed variants of the Speedcat and an original Ballerina slipper.
Though the PUMA assortment stands out from the subdued collection, the designs are quite standard compared to the designer's previous explorations of activewear sets. For SS23,Bella Hadidfronted theadidas x Balenciaga campaign, which blew remixed logo tees, tracksuits, and football jerseys to oversized proportions. Such magnified and surrealistic versions of otherwise familiar activewear silhouettes are omnipresent in Demna's Balenciaga collections.
But now, even as one of the key ushers of fashion's oversized era, Demna has expressed that he's through with exploring outsized silhouettes. In a recent interview withDie Zeit,he shared his thoughts on the mass acceptance of oversized fits, stating, 'It's a specific silhouette—one of many possibilities. But right now, I'm very uninterested in oversized fashion. I've been there, I've done that.'
Furthermore, Demna toldVoguethe intentions behind his rather pared-back FW25 collection following the March show: 'It's easy to put a chair on the head and say, oh, that's wearable art—or putting a parka upside down, (which) I kind of did for the last 12 years—and I love it, by the way—but also I felt like maybe I had enough of that.'
Perhaps this is why the new PUMA collection and the 2024Under Armour partnershipsimilarly present a shift back to largely regular fits and conventional shapes from the designer.
Often grouped with the 'post-Soviet' aesthetics of designers likeGosha Rubchinskiy, Demna's undying affinity for athletic styles is more firmly rooted in his identity and upbringing than people may realize. Many have tied certain Demna sensibilities, namely, bootlegged sportswear, counterfeit goods, worker uniforms, and underground subcultural style, to his roots in Soviet Georgia and subsequent years in Ukraine, Russia, and Germany.
Demna carried many of these 'post-Soviet' throughlines at every step of his journey, including foundingVetementswith his brotherGuram Gvasaliain 2014. It was 2016 when Vetements famously madeChampioncool again with their inaugural collaboration, which adapted the Champion typeface into a Vetements wordmark. However, introducing these everyday themes into Balenciaga's glamorous Western European ethos completely revolutionized the brand's historic identity.
Having publicly renounced oversized fashion and expressed his boredom with the avant-garde, Demna signals that his takeover of the Florentine house could herald a departure from the signatures he has so closely cultivated until this point. Indeed,Gucciis a different animal with a much stronger presence in the public imagination — one that may be much more difficult for Demna to challenge than Balenciaga.
Will the designer continue to play with his archetypal Demna themes at Gucci, or is he trying to tell the world that he will showcase a new facet of his capabilities?
The PUMA x Balenciaga collection is available nowonlineand at select Balenciaga stores.

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‘From The World Of John Wick: Ballerina' New On Streaming This Week, Report Says
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Forbes

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‘From The World Of John Wick: Ballerina' New On Streaming This Week, Report Says

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Joey Chestnut gives behind-the-scenes look at ‘hungry' prep for Nathan's return
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Joey Chestnut gives behind-the-scenes look at ‘hungry' prep for Nathan's return

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That city is an amazing city. It's one of the most underrated cities. It's open till 4 a.m., all the bars have great food. I overdo it a little bit. Q: Boyhood idol? A: Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire, the Bash Brothers. Q: You didn't play baseball, did you? A: Just Little League. My dad made me try the marching band in high school. 11 Joey Chestnut Champion hotdog eater attends the Mystics against the Fever game on June 3, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. NBAE via Getty Images Q: What did you play? A: Trumpet. Q: Boyhood dream? A: I remember I was playing with a fire engine, and my mom asked me if I want to be a firefighter when I grew up. I was like, 'No, I want to be the dog on the back of the fire engine (laugh).' Q: What drives you? A: I think I have perspective. I know how lucky I am. I used to have a normal job in construction management, and now I get to travel, eat, make other people happy, meet people. It's a really good gig, and as long as I'm healthy and having fun, I'm gonna keep doing it. Q: How long do you want to do this? A: I think Tom Brady won his last Super Bowl when he was [43], right? Getting older and pushing your body it gets harder, but it's really satisfying if you can still do it. Q: Goals? A: Stay healthy and treat people the way I want to be treated. Q: What are you most proud of about your career? A: Really that first victory. People said it couldn't be done. Q: Why did they think it couldn't be done? A: Kobayashi had such a lock. He had everybody convinced that he was special. I refused to believe it. That's why it's so important for me to convince myself and convince the other people. Once everybody's convinced, it's hard for the other eaters to convince themselves. Q: Broadway Joe Namath guaranteed a Super Bowl. Will you guarantee a victory on July Fourth? A: I can't guarantee it, but I can guarantee it's gonna be really, really hard for somebody to beat me. If somebody beats me, they will have had to earn it. I can guarantee if my body works for me even 80 percent, I'm gonna blow everybody away.

Can TikTok's ‘Shirtless Race' Become More than a Trend?
Can TikTok's ‘Shirtless Race' Become More than a Trend?

Business of Fashion

time15 hours ago

  • Business of Fashion

Can TikTok's ‘Shirtless Race' Become More than a Trend?

NEW YORK — For three days in May, 14,000 men and women stormed New York City's Pier 76, just west of Hudson Yards, many of them in various states of athletic undress — not to party, but certainly to sweat. They were there for what outsiders viewing from TikTok call 'the shirtless race,' and what is known to proponents as Hyrox, a strength-and-endurance fitness race that combines an eight kilometre run with eight functional workouts, including a 330-pound sled drag. Some athletes collapse from exhaustion at the finish line. The last 2024–2025 season attracted over 600,000 participants, who competed in over 80 races worldwide. (Courtesy) Yet, Hyrox has built a devoted and growing global following. Fitness influencer Eric Hinman, NFL tight end Darren Waller and actor Patrick Wilson were among those who competed during the New York event, which had a waitlist, according to Hyrox and its Swiss parent company Infront Sports & Media. The first race, held in 2017 in Hamburg, Germany, drew about 650 participants; the last 2024–2025 season attracted over 600,000, who competed in over 80 races worldwide, culminating in the World Championships in Chicago last week. By combining familiar functional movements like rowing and wall balls with running in an open-entry, festival-like marathon atmosphere, Hyrox has become the latest global fitness craze, with almost equal participation by men (52 percent) and women (48). In the past, millions of everyday gym-goers didn't have anything to work towards besides looking good and getting healthy. 'We gave them a definition [and competition] for what they were already doing,' said Moritz 'Mo' Fürste, who, along with Christian Toetzke, co-founded the company in 2017. ADVERTISEMENT Each athlete paid anywhere from $70 to over $200 to participate. While company reps declined to disclose revenue figures, Fürste shared on a Business of Sport podcast earlier this year that the average entry fee is around €130 ($150), putting its annual ticket sales revenue at roughly $90 million. They also generate revenue from event brand sponsors like Redbull, a constellation of 8,000 gyms that pay up to $150 a month to be its affiliates, spectator tickets and partnerships with brands like Puma, which sells co-branded products at the events, its stores and third-party retail partners. 'There's a real loyalty from participants to support the brands that are involved with Hyrox,' said Erin Longin, Puma's vice president of running and training. 'It's really helping us reach more consumers that way.' As the social distancing era fades, athletes are seeking community-driven fitness beyond the walls of traditional gyms. (Courtesy) Hyrox arrives at an opportune moment. As the social distancing era fades, athletes are seeking community-driven fitness beyond the walls of traditional gyms. With its stickiness and built-in social media appeal, Hyrox has the makings of a spectator sport like a marathon or a triathlon. Still, like any sport, it needs to continually find ways to keep its athletes and audiences engaged to avoid becoming another fleeting fad. Off to the Races Hyrox isn't the first strength-and-endurance race out of the blocks. In the 2010s, cultish CrossFit peaked with 415,000 participants in their 2018 Games, and rugged adventure Spartan Race saw 1.3 million participants each year at its height. But most CrossFit Games participants competed in their local affiliate gyms (called 'boxes'), and most Spartan Races were held in far-flung locations without mass-level audiences. During the pandemic, both saw declines in participation. On the surface, Hyrox follows the same formula, but with accessible twists: Athletes can compete in various division such as singles, doubles and relay teams, allowing different ability levels to take part. The format is also simpler. Unlike other races with their involved scoring systems, whoever finishes Hyrox first wins, and the standardized workouts make it a straightforward race for time. 'There is this repetitive combination of things that you have to do, which makes it stickier,' said Fürste. The challenge of completing the race is a draw, allowing participants to not only compete against one another but their own personal records. 'The endorphins you get from doing something that hard are insanely rewarding, and that sense of accomplishment is worth chasing and repeating,' added Heber Cannon, a fitness filmmaker. Hyrox also stages its events in some of the world's biggest media markets in some of the most picturesque locations — New York's Pier 76, Paris' Grand Palais and Singapore's Marina Bay Sands — where everyday athletes and professionals compete in front of packed crowds and seas of iPhones recording their every move. Fürste said the organic growth in participation coincided with the organic growth on social media too. In the past twenty months, views on Hyrox-related terms have surged 654 percent on TikTok, according to a cultural analytics firm. In the month following its first major co-branded product collection with Puma in January, Puma x Hyrox mentions generated $537,000 in media impact value, said data analytics firm Launchmetrics. ADVERTISEMENT And products from the Puma x Hyrox collection sold out within hours of the New York event opening its doors. 'We almost can't figure out the right stock levels to have at these events, because each event just keeps outdoing the last,' said Longin. Tribe Check Behind the social media hype, Hyrox's growth is driven by its 8,000 (and growing) partner gyms, which Fürste called 'the backbone of its ever-expanding global community.' He explained how Hyrox has, in some ways, solved problems for the crowded traditional gym industry, where many businesses compete for fickle consumers solely based on price and convenience. 'It's very difficult for a gym, usually, to create a strong community,' he said. Most are built for solo experiences and feel outdated in a moment where people are craving more social fitness activities, as evidenced by the rise of running clubs and climbing gyms. Even sportswear giants like Nike are noting the behavioural shift — the US company has begun to open Nike Studios, group fitness gyms designed to foster community workouts, starting with a Southern California location in 2023. Competitors run at Hyrox. (Courtesy) After the social distancing era, Magida noticed that people wanted to be connected with each other more than ever. When he launched a Hyrox program in his gym in 2021, 'it revitalised the community, and people were talking to each other, and there was culture forming because people were training with purpose,' said Magida. 'There were more high-fives and hugs than ever before.' Within two years of being a Hyrox partner, he saw a 40 percent increase in his business. Ruben Belliard, who runs The Training Lab in New York City — one of the most competitive markets for gyms — saw his membership jump up to 15 percent in the first year after partnering with Hyrox. In his 17 years in the fitness business, he's seen plenty of fitness trends come and go. 'The next evolution is going to be hybrid training like Hyrox,' he said. 'People want to be able to run fast and be strong at the same time, where, typically, in the past, it was one or the other.' For the upcoming season, which starts next month, many races — in Singapore, Sydney, London — have already sold out, often in minutes of being announced. 'I think it's still in that building phase, building awareness, building participation,' said Longin, noting the previous season's awareness wasn't as widespread. Now the company is preparing to scale further to keep up with growing demand by planning to add more cities and race days. 'The next evolution is going to be hybrid training like Hyrox,' Ruben Belliard said. (Courtesy) But long-term staying power is far from guaranteed. 'It's been proven that people will always train for marathons. People will always train for those types of things,' added Vennare. 'But Hyrox needs to make sure to keep its brand and the competition exciting and fun so that people don't get sick of it.'

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