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Simone Biles Reveals Where She Stands for Competing in 2028 LA Olympics

Simone Biles Reveals Where She Stands for Competing in 2028 LA Olympics

Yahoo04-06-2025

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Simone Biles Reveals Where She Stands for Competing in 2028 LA Olympics originally appeared on Parade.
When it comes to competing in the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, Simone Biles isn't ruling it out just yet.
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The seven-time Olympic gold medalist, 28, opened up about the topic while discussing her Simone Biles Rising docuseries at Netflix's FYC event alongside executive producer and director Katie Walsh in Hollywood on Monday, June 2.
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'I think it's such a blessing that [the] L.A. 2028 Olympics are here,' she told the crowd when asked about the potential of her competing. 'I'm not sure at what capacity [I'll be involved] because if we've learned anything from the docuseries, it's that your mind and your body have to be in sync.'
The gymnast continued: 'I am currently taking a little bit of time off to 1: Support my husband [Jonathan Owens], and 2: To just take time off because what we put our bodies through on the mat is a lot. It's physically taxing, and at my old age... I'm 28. For a gymnast, that's old! I started at like, 4! But I do believe that I will be in L.A. — I'm just not sure at what capacity yet, if that's on the mat or in the stands. But I'd be more than happy to attend in any way that I can."
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Biles last competed for Team USA at the 2024 Games in Paris. In total, she has 11 Olympic medals: seven gold, two silver and two bronze. She is also the most decorated gymnast in World Championships history with 30 medals: 23 gold, four silver and three bronze.
Related: Fans Praise 'Stunning' Simone Biles in Neon Orange Bikini Honeymoon Photos
The athlete previously teased that she would be in Los Angeles for the upcoming games when she dropped by Today on Jan. 10 to surprise Hoda Kotb on her last day with the morning broadcast.
While chatting with Kotb on her final show, Biles told the beloved journalist, who has already confirmed that she will cover the L.A. and Milan Olympic games for NBC, 'Hopefully we're in L.A. together, whatever that means.'
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While Biles did not elaborate further, Kotb joked, "We broke news on my last day!"
Simone Biles Reveals Where She Stands for Competing in 2028 LA Olympics first appeared on Parade on Jun 3, 2025
This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 3, 2025, where it first appeared.

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The Tea Purchaser's Guide; or, The Lady and Gentleman's Tea Table and Useful Companion, in the Knowledge and Choice of Teas, authored anonymously by 'A Friend to the Public,' could be considered a kind of 18th-century Wirecutter. Such compendia were created to avoid choosing according to 'fancy' or 'whim,' two vices that made their appearance in novels of the time, as did a new stock female character: the coquette. This was the woman who exercises her power to choose by browsing extensively but also withholding a decision. She teases. As Rosenfeld emphasizes throughout her history, such excesses were often projected onto women, who were accused of causing 'social and moral decay' through their frivolity and unexpected economic power. The shopping revolution was as significant as the more obvious political revolts that occurred around the same time. 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This insecurity is particularly glaring in a world of proliferating algorithms that serve us more of what they predict we will want and AIs that offer to do the thinking for us. If choice is the 'useless and exhausted idiom' that Rosenfeld suggests it might be by the end of her history, then maybe the concept is worth abandoning altogether. Doing so, she writes, would be akin to asking 'if we are done with capitalism and democracy and their special offspring, human rights'—if we are ready, that is, to throw out the dominant principle of the contemporary world. I don't think we are. But if choice has indeed become an end unto itself, absent a set of principles for actually making choices, then something has gone awry. Abortion rights is a telling test case. 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