From Deseret News archives:
California gym tries to entice teens with video games, personal trainers
Wallace isn't a busy professional squeezing in lunchtime workouts; he's a skinny 16-year-old with braces and a backward baseball cap. He's working out at Overtime Fitness Inc., one of the nation's only gyms for teens.
"At other gyms no one would sit down and teach me how to use the weights or the machines," said Wallace, a junior at Palo Alto High School. "Here, you get a lot of personal attention and that gives you motivation."
Wallace's mother pays the $59 monthly fee at Overtime, a Mountain View gym that has about 100 teen members and hopes for regional and even national franchises.
The gym offers a mix of conventional training equipment treadmills, free weights, yoga mats and kid-friendly features like a rock-climbing wall and cheerleading conditioning sessions. It also tries to appeal to teens with an arcade featuring video games requiring kids to box, dance and jump. Riders race against each other on stationary bikes.
Others question Overtime's use of video games a tactic that won't necessarily compel kids to keep exercising as they grow up.
Investors and employees including founder Patrick Ferrell, who launched GamePro Magazine and helped establish the video game conference E3 say high-tech toys lure some teens. But they say the gym also offers nutritional counseling and academic tutoring that encourage lifelong health. Plus, they say, it's better than leaving kids at malls and fast-food restaurants.
"What are our teenagers doing when they're idle? They eat, they go to Starbucks, they sit around at the mall and they have corresponding health problems," said CEO Laura Tauscher, a mother of two teenagers. "We're not trying to create gym rats we're trying to give kids the tools and intelligence to keep their health in mind."
Overtime, which opened in September and still hasn't turned a profit, is entering the market as established chains are trying to get kids to become lifetime members. San Ramon-based 24 Hour Fitness just started "Hoopology," a summer basketball pilot program in the San Francisco Bay Area for boys and girls ages 8-17.
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