I think it’s unfair that some professional athletes have been publicly nailed to the cross over cheating with doping, while all of their competitors were cheating. So I don’t intend to post about the known doping scandals, but intend to post about evidence that “clean” athletes were (are) using performance-enhancing drugs (like steroids and EPO).
While it looks like most of the big doping scandals have been in cycling, it looks like cycling doping tests are the most rigorous among all sports. This suggests that in other professional sports even more performance enhancing drugs are used.
I had earlier posted some of this information in my thread on Quincy Jones and his connections to so many (mostly black) celebrities dying under suspicious circumstances: viewtopic.php?p=85922#p85922
What most people DO know is that celebrities use plastic surgery to look better. These days it is also known that many celebrities use weight loss drugs (e.g. ozempic).
It seems apparent that many movie stars, who won’t admit this, use steroids to get the low-fat, big muscle look that we now all want to look like. This in turn has led to many people getting body dysmorphia, never satisfied at how we look, even when we have already achieved a healthy body.
It aren’t just professional athletes and bodybuilders that use steroids, but also amateurs at the local gym.
The adverse effects of steroids aren’t just physical but also mental, including roid rage. Steroids are as addictive as other drugs and withdrawal effects make it even more difficult to stop taking them.
Steroid use can also lead to acne (especially on your back).

The adverse effects get worse the younger you start taking them, and some are permanent (including the positive effect of big muscles): https://drugabuse.com/stimulants/steroids/effects-use/
I’ve previously posted about the bubble gut that is not uncommon in the current huge pro-bodybuilders…
There are all of these theories about perfect proportions, while there are many, many stories praising the "golden age" of bodybuilding, compared to the current crop of steroids balloon muscles that get bigger every year. There is one part of the body nobody wants big - the belly.
In the 1990s, the ever expanding muscles reached the waist, with the Palumboism, bubble gut phenomenon as the result, with massive shredded six-packs over a bloated and inflated midsection (this isn't fat!).
Bodybuilders can suck their belly in to still look impressive, but sometimes they lose control.
See Kai Greene and Phil Heath (7 time Mr. Olympia, I'm almost sure) on stage.

Also when the abs separate on the vertical centre line and deviate to the sides (which also happens to women during pregnancy), diastasis recti, isn't good...
See Ronnie Coleman, 8 time Mr. Olympia, with a bad case of diastasis recti.

It not only happens to bodybuilders (and pregnant women) but also to men with a big "beer" belly (but you won't see it here for obvious reasons).
viewtopic.php?p=80642#p80642
Another problem is the biometric weighing scales (BIA) that don’t give a good indication of bodyfat percentage at all (even the BMI is better in some cases), “the individual error rates can get high, with some research showing error rates of around 8-9%. In fact, BIA doesn't do much better than BMI at predicting body fat in some cases”: https://weightology.net/the-pitfalls-of ... dance-bia/
Not perfect either, but the Body Shape Index (a.k.a. ABSI), that compares waist circumference to height and bodyweight, gives a better indication of our fat percentage.
According to the BMI, I’m obese at 106 kg (BMI > 30), while I have an ABSI of 0.072, considerably lower (thus better) than the average 0.083 for a 50 year old: https://www.thehealthsite.com/news/body ... ex-125763/