| REVIEWER | RATING & REVIEW |
 | Chalky Studebaker (4) 08/03/2006 | As someone who is friends with the entire Los Angeles Clippers basketball team, I can say w/confidence that athleticism is awesome in a friend.
(2 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | LadyJesusFan777 (33) 06/05/2006 | What does this have to do with friendship? Except that if you have this in common with your friend, it gives you something to talk about.
(7 voted this helpful, 1 funny and 0 agree) |
 | Molfan (57) 03/13/2006 | I am not an athlete so it would not be important to me. I would not mind a friend who liked to go for walk or something. otherwise being an athlete is not high on my list for friendship.
(3 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | jgls (12) 01/12/2004 | really unimportant unless it is an athlete who can get me tickets to my favorite sporting event. in that circumstance i will give it 2 stars.
(3 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | tvtator (5) 11/18/2003 | Everyone must pass the triathalon before they can become friends with me.
(4 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | adventurous (0) 08/19/2003 | I think having athletic friends is great! Not because I care if they can run fast or anything but because it creates so many more activities that are fun and exciting to do. I personally like DOING things - rather than sitting around.
(0 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | BIGBABY (10) 05/17/2003 | I actually find this "athletic" completely unnecessary and discriminating against fat people. No, Im NOT fat but why is this on here? Being athletic has absolutely nothing to do with qualities of a friend. Terrible.
(2 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | Vudija (92) 05/04/2003 | I would be a hypocrite if I said that being athletic mattered in a friendship with me. I am not very athletic myself. If my friends are athletic...good for them, but if they aren't, I won't abandon them, just because they can't run a mile, or swim 10 laps in a pool.
(1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | lukskywlkr. (3) 11/14/2002 | I want a friend who actually wants to go out and do stuff, not one who lays around like a lazy slug. But then they wouldn't have to be marathon runners either. I could live with that.
(0 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | CastleBee (81) 12/12/2001 | Why in the world would this matter - except maybe to some bone-headed, shallow jock? How sad to think someone would actually consider this a way to determine friendship.
(5 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | Snoopy (3) 12/08/2001 | It's not important to me. Everyone has their own interests.
(1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | milkyway_citizen_nr1 (0) 12/08/2001 | And what has body type to do with freindship?
(1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | Janey_Lane (0) 12/08/2001 | Please! I couldn't stand it if my friend was really athletic. Playing soccer once in a while is one thing, jogging 1 km every morning is another. Especially if she's expecting me to go along with her. When I was in school I was too lazy to even participate in gym class for fear of injuring something. If my friend's gonna be a sportsfreak it wouldn't really work out.
(1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | Shroomwoman (12) 12/06/2001 | I secretly dislike really athletic people, especially the outdoorsy types. I think it's because they are often obsessed with a particular sport, and you end up hearing way more than you ever want to hear about it. Even worse is when they want you to go out and participate in the sport, too. These focused individuals have lost perspective and will subject the uninitiated to prolonged torture, such as "easy" bike rides, "short" hikes, etc. I don't mind being friends with athletic people, but I refuse to let a particular sport become a focus of what we talk about and do together.
(8 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
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