Tony Little

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Tony Little (b. September, 1956) is an American TV fitness personality and businessman, best known for his fitness infomercial products. His most famous product is the Tony Little's Gazelle by Fitness Quest. Tony is a certified personal trainer and identifies himself as "America's Personal Trainerâ„¢", and most of the products he sells on his infomercials are targeted to the personal fitness market. He is infamous for his over-the-top, hyper-enthusiastic personality and long flowing blond hair. Three of Tony's favorite catchphrases are "You can do it," "It's technique!," and "Always believe in yourself."

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As a child, Little was abandoned by his father, and raised by his mother in Ohio. As an adult, he moved to Tampa, Florida to advance his personal fitness career. He is married to Tacy Little, and has two children, Trent and Tara, with her.

Tony is a former Junior National Bodybuilding champion. In 1983, while training for The Mr. America Bodybuilding Championship, he was in a near-fatal car accident in which he suffered numerous physical injuries. He suffered lacerations to his face and body and two herniated discs, a cracked vertebra, and a dislocated knee. He recovered enough to compete in the event and finished in fifth place. Tony has stated publicly that afterward he suffered from depression and became addicted to pain medication and gained weight. After realizing that his life was slipping into a downward spiral, Tony developed his exercise programs and went on to become a successful businessman in the fitness industry. His book One on One with Tony Little: The Complete 28-Day Body Sculpting And Weight Loss Program has sold thousands of copies. His fitness videos have won him 11 Platinum Awards and he has formed partnerships with fitness clubs, HSN and QVC to sell his products.

Tony revealed on a July 9 HSN broadcast of One on One with Tony Little that he will be turning 50 in September 2006. He is in remarkable physical condition for his age considering his history.

Tony has frequently been the target and source of parodies. In his own infomercials, he's dressed up, and made fun of other TV personalities, such as Fabio, Richard Simmons, and Susan Powter. Some of these were light hearted, but others were part of attacks and counter-attacks between competitors, each portraying others as having silly gimmicks, while they themselves had "legitimate" products.

In 1997, he appeared as himself, making fun of his own image, on The Weird Al Show. The following year, he once again parodied himself on the Fox show Mad TV. He also did a cameo appearance in the movie Frezno Smooth in 1999. In 2005, he appeared in a GEICO commercial, that at first pretends to be another of his personal training videos, but then becomes a commercial for car insurance.

Tony Little recent stint in the "Jensuscho" Campaign also landed him a new role in public ad-campaigns.

Tony also appeared in the 2006 film The Pumpkin Karver.

In October 2006, Tony appeared on an episode of G4TV's popular videogame review show X-Play; the episode in question was actually named "The Tony Little Episode". The highlight of the episode featured Little in a comedy sketch which directly parodied his own infomercials. In the sketch, Little magically transports (via superpowers) an excessively obese member of G4's web design team into a fitness infomercial (Little claims in the sketch that he obtained said superpowers when he was 16 years old, after being bitten by a radioactive ponytail). Little then shows the person how they can begin an exercise regimen using specialized video game peripherals. (X-Play's Tony Little Fitness Infomercial - MP4 video format)

Currently, Tony can be seen guest starring on the VH1 reality show Celebrity Paranormal Project. Tony will be featured in the October 29, 2006 episode alongside Rachel Hunter, Traci Bingham, Godfrey and Survivor: Africa winner Ethan Zohn.

The FTC found in 1999 that the infomercials for several Fitness Quest products, including Tony Little's Gazelle Glider, made several unsubstantiated claims, including the claim that "users could burn up to 1000 calories per hour." [1]

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