logo
Blockbuster Actress Admits She Went Up 4 Pant Sizes in 'Crazy Strong' Transformation

Blockbuster Actress Admits She Went Up 4 Pant Sizes in 'Crazy Strong' Transformation

Yahoo11-06-2025
Blockbuster Actress Admits She Went Up 4 Pant Sizes in 'Crazy Strong' Transformation originally appeared on Parade.
Sydney Sweeney is revealing just how far she went to embody legendary boxer Christy Martin in the upcoming biopic directed by David Michôd.
In a new interview with W Magazine, the Euphoria star, 27, opened up about her intense physical transformation for the role that included significant muscle gain and a major shift in body size.
Sweeney, who typically wears a size 23 in jeans — roughly a U.S. size 00 or 000, with a 23-inch waist and 33–34-inch hips — didn't hold back when discussing the toll and triumph of the process.
"I'm usually a size 23 in jeans," the actress shared, reflecting on her transformation.
To prepare for the role, she committed to an extreme training regimen. 'I came onboard to play Christy, and I had about three-and-a-half months of training,' she explained. 'I started eating. I weight-trained in the morning for an hour, kickboxed midday for about two hours, and then weight-trained again at night for an hour.'
'My body was completely different,' she continued. 'I didn't fit in any of my clothes. I'm usually a size 23 in jeans, and I was wearing a size 27. My boobs got bigger. And my butt got huge. It was crazy! I was like, Oh my god. But it was amazing: I was so strong, like crazy strong.'
Sweeney is portraying Martin, a trailblazing figure in women's boxing known as 'The Coal Miner's Daughter.'
Martin rose to fame after her electrifying 1996 bout with Deirdre Gogarty at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas — a moment credited with putting women's boxing on the map. Behind the scenes, however, Martin endured two decades of domestic abuse at the hands of her ex-husband, trainer Jim Martin, before surviving a brutal attack in 2010. She later came out as a lesbian.
While speaking to TMZ about the project, Martin expressed excitement over Sweeney taking on her story.
'I want this movie to bring awareness to domestic violence, the challenge of sexuality and overall underdog story,' Martin said. 'I am a coal miner's daughter from a small town in southern West Virginia that made an impact in a sport that wasn't taken seriously — women's boxing.'
The biopic does not yet have a release date.
Blockbuster Actress Admits She Went Up 4 Pant Sizes in 'Crazy Strong' Transformation first appeared on Parade on Jun 10, 2025
This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 10, 2025, where it first appeared.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeans

timean hour ago

American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeans

NEW YORK -- Teen retailer American Eagle Outfitters has a message to its critics, who took issue over its denim ad campaign with 27-year-old actor Sydney Sweeney that sparked a debate over race and Western beauty standards. The campaign, the retailer said, was always about the jeans. In a statement posted on American Eagle's Instagram account on Friday, the retailer said the ad campaign 'is and always was about the jeans. Her jeans. Her story. We'll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way. Great jeans look good on everyone.' The message marked the first time the teen retailer responded to days of backlash since the ad with the tagline 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans' launched last week. In the run-up to the ad blitz, the company's chief marketing officer told trade media outlets that it included 'clever, even provocative language' and was 'definitely going to push buttons." It's unclear if the company knew how much controversy the ad could raise. Most of the negative reception focused on videos that used the word 'genes' instead of 'jeans' when discussing the blonde-haired, blue-eyed actor known for the HBO series 'Euphoria' and 'White Lotus.' Critics found the most troubling was a teaser video in which Sweeney says, 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color. My jeans are blue.' The video appeared on American Eagle's Facebook page and other social media channels but is not part of the ad campaign. Some critics saw the wordplay as a nod, either unintentional or deliberate, to eugenics, a discredited theory that held humanity could be improved through selective breeding for certain traits. Other commenters accused detractors of reading too much into the campaign's message. Some marketing experts said the buzz is always good even if it's not uniformly positive. 'If you try to follow all the rules, you'll make lots of people happy, but you'll fail,' Allen Adamson, co-founder of marketing consultancy Metaforce said. 'The rocket won't take off.'

Bizarre, beachy fetish is blowing up with US porn fans this summer: report
Bizarre, beachy fetish is blowing up with US porn fans this summer: report

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Bizarre, beachy fetish is blowing up with US porn fans this summer: report

There's a new summer accessory heating up pool parties — and no, it's not a thong bikini or a margarita slushie. It's a beach ball. And it's making people very hot under the inflatable collar. According to a new report by adult video platform Clips4Sale, summer is turning up the temperature on some steamy — and very specific — kinks, including a 46.85% surge in content featuring people blowing up beach balls. Advertisement 3 Beach balls are inflating more than egos this summer — and they've got fetish fans feeling the heat. bernardbodo – Yes, that's what people are watching — hopefully behind closed cabana doors. 'We often think of summer as a slow season for adult content because people are out of the house more,' a representative for the sexy site wrote. Advertisement 'But summer also awakens these specific, beachy fetishes that lie dormant the rest of the year,' they explained. Turns out, while you're worrying about avoiding sunburn and getting bikini waxes, someone out there is sexually fixated on scuba gear — up 37.44% — or obsessed with pool floaties. Even sweat is getting its turn in the sun, with views of glistening, sticky clips spiking nearly 18%. Swimming content alone skyrocketed by 189.72% — because nothing says 'summer fling' like synchronized splashing and a strategically unzipped wetsuit. Advertisement And this isn't just a seasonal slip — it's part of a growing national trend toward boutique kinks. 3 Beach balls are bouncing into X-rated territory — and this summer, they're hotter than a thong on cement. schab – Back in February, Clips4Sale published its annual United States of Fetish report — revealing that Americans' horniest habits are both highly regional and off-the-wall. When entering 2025, the data showed 'several converging trends,' the site's Avery Martin said at the time. Advertisement 'We've seen tremendous growth not only in giantess and vore fantasies, but also chastity, ballbusting and pegging,' they revealed. That's right — the most popular fetish nationwide is the giantess fantasy, or getting hot and bothered over towering women who could crush you like a Capri Sun. 3 Back in February, The Post covered Clips4Sale's jaw-dropping fetish map — proving America's kinks are as wild as they are local. Rido – New Yorkers in particular can't get enough of it, along with citizens of New Jersey, Tennessee, Indiana, D.C., and Arizona. Martin explained the phenomenon: 'While there's a public resurgence of masculine energy, privately men are fantasizing about powerful women. It may be alphas in the streets, but it's beta in the sheets.' Close behind was vore — the fantasy of being eaten or doing the eating — which overtook giantess in places like California and Nevada. The South, meanwhile, keeps it light with a thirst for 'tickling' and 'wrestling,' while Utah's top search? Balloons. We'll leave that one alone. Advertisement 'Part of the explanation may lie in volume,' Martin added. 'The number of searches nearly doubled in the past year. Americans are increasingly open to exploring fetish, and states are finding their freak.' From pedal-pumping in Mississippi to testicle torture (aka 'ballbusting') in Connecticut, it's clear: this summer, kink is a contact sport — and your average beach day just got a lot more blown up. So if you catch someone side-eyeing your pool floatie a little too long, don't be surprised. It's not just summer love — it's summer lust.

American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeans
American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeans

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

American Eagle responds to critics over ad with Sydney Sweeney, saying it was always about the jeans

NEW YORK (AP) — Teen retailer American Eagle Outfitters has a message to its critics, who took issue over its denim ad campaign with 27-year-old actor Sydney Sweeney that sparked a debate over race and Western beauty standards. The campaign, the retailer said, was always about the jeans. In a statement posted on American Eagle's Instagram account on Friday, the retailer said the ad campaign 'is and always was about the jeans. Her jeans. Her story. We'll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way. Great jeans look good on everyone.' The message marked the first time the teen retailer responded to days of backlash since the ad with the tagline 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans' launched last week. In the run-up to the ad blitz, the company's chief marketing officer told trade media outlets that it included 'clever, even provocative language' and was 'definitely going to push buttons." It's unclear if the company knew how much controversy the ad could raise. Most of the negative reception focused on videos that used the word 'genes' instead of 'jeans' when discussing the blonde-haired, blue-eyed actor known for the HBO series 'Euphoria' and 'White Lotus.' Critics found the most troubling was a teaser video in which Sweeney says, 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color. My jeans are blue.' Other commenters accused detractors of reading too much into the campaign's message. Some marketing experts said the buzz is always good even if it's not uniformly positive. 'If you try to follow all the rules, you'll make lots of people happy, but you'll fail,' Allen Adamson, co-founder of marketing consultancy Metaforce said. 'The rocket won't take off.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store