To be perfectly honest Howard, I think most fans who attend and aren't family members or friends are mostly interested in the bodybuilding. At the Olympia this year, there weren't that many folks in there for bikini. I didn't even want to waste my time watching that but I wanted to see the fitness because I love the routines. It started filling up when it was time for the men's open.
I thought there would be a bigger crowd for men's physique but many in the crowd left after the women's physique finals. I kinda peeked in on the 212 but they didn't have that big of a crowd either.
IMO I think the personalities play a big role in the way things go. These guys these days aren't very personable or charismatic. Boring. Add that they have those poofy physiques with bloated stomachs and it's just not all that interesting.
These guys these days aren't very exciting. Jay had one of the biggest bodybuilder lines and he's not exactly the most exciting guy on the planet so that should tell you something. Ronnie didn't even have a line...and I thought that was very sad.
A lot of the stupid internet people had lots of people coming to see them.
The biggest money maker for most promoters now is national or big regional amateur contests.
I believe the entry fee was 200 dollars and recently increased to $250.
Most national events get at least 500 bikini and figure girls to enter which is $100,000 on entry fees alone!!!
This is yearbook 101 marketing. The only people that buy school yearbooks are the students in it and their family.
If a bikini girls pays her entry fee and has a few friends/family buy tickets to watch her, you don't need BB fans to make $$.
That's fine and dandy for the organization and promoters, but it does NOTHING to promote real bodybuilding.
I'm one who doesn't think bodybuilding needs to be real profitable to be a viable sport. When I started , most serious bodybuilders worked a regular job. Most promoters did it for love of the sport over profits.
You entered a contest to do your best and have a goal to focus your training on.
The idea that bodybuilding should be a career is NOT meant for 99% who compete.
Anyhoo, over in the middle east, bodybuilding IS a big deal. Who knows why?