|      Joe    Weider, the    self-made fitness and bodybuilding guru who    built a magazine empire that included more than a dozen popular publications    such as Muscle and Fitness, Shape and Men's    Fitness, died on Saturday at the age of 93. Weider, also known for    starting the Mr Olympia bodybuilding contest in the 1960s and mentoring a    young Arnold Schwarzenegger, passed away from    heart failure at a Los Angeles area hospital, his longtime publicist Charlotte Parker said. "Joe Weider was a    titan in the fitness industry and one of the kindest men I have ever    met," Schwarzenegger said in a statement posted on his official website. "He leaves behind a    fantastic legacy of a fitter world," the film star and former governor    of California said. "Very few people can claim to have influenced as    many lives as Joe did through his magazines, his supplements, his training    equipment and his big-hearted personality." Born in a tough    neighborhood of Montreal in 1920, Weider began lifting weights as a teenager    to stand up to bullies and older boys before competing in his first bodybuilding contest at the age of 17, according to a    biography provided by Parker. He started his first    magazine, Your Physique, in the early 1940s and with his younger brother Ben    rented Montreal's Monument National Theater to host the first Mr Canada    contest during that same decade. The two brothers also    founded the International Federation of Bodybuilders and in 1965 Weider    created the Mr Olympia competition, the sport's premiere bodybuilding    contest. Weider met Schwarzenegger    at a bodybuilding contest in Europe and convinced him to move from his native    Austria to the United States to seek wider recognition. "He saw a lot in    Arnold," Parker said. "He felt that the sport needed a star and    right away he could see that Arnold was something special." Schwarzenegger, then    nicknamed the "Austrian Oak," first gained fame by winning a string    of Mr Olympia titles in the early 1970s before going on to a successful    career in such films as "The Terminator" and "Total    Recall." He was elected governor    of California in 2003 and served two terms before retiring from politics. "Joe didn't just    inspire my earliest dreams; he made them come true the day he invited me to    move to America to pursue my bodybuilding career," Schwarzenegger, who    visited Weider in the hospital before his death, said in the statement. "I will never forget    his generosity. One of Joe's greatest qualities is that he wasn't just    generous with his money; he freely gave of his time and expertise and became    a father figure for me," he said. Schwarzenegger also    credited Weider with getting him his first acting role, in a movie called    "Hercules in New York," by claiming that the hulking young Austrian    was a Shakespearean actor from Germany. Weider, who also created    a line of sports nutritional supplements and ultimately founded more than a    dozen fitness magazines including Fit Pregnancy, Living Fit and Flex, sold    his Weider Publicans to American Media Inc. in the early 2000s. He is survived by his    wife of more than 50 years, Betty.  |    
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