The more society becomes digitalised, the greater the desire to meet up IRL (In Real Life). For a long time, rollerblading across Paris on Friday evenings was the height of urban modernity, a mix of sharing, effort and self-expression, always with the idea of meeting people, or even THE person who would change your life. Ultra-modern solitude. Rollerblades have gradually given way to runners, and it is now common to come across groups of panting thirty-somethings in Paris, dressed in colourful outfits with smartphones strapped to their biceps, eager to win the inter-neighbourhood battle that prompted them to put on their pair of On trainers (“at On, we believe that by moving, human beings can achieve incredible things. Movement stimulates the unconscious, where inspiration is born”). Yes, but here’s the thing.
Marketing hates empty spaces, so it didn’t take long for ‘enriched’ versions of these urban races to appear: Food Running, where the clock is ignored and the sole aim is to meet people with whom you will ultimately share a tasting session that will inevitably end up on social media.
We can mention the Food Runner Club race (7 km) on the 31st of January, at the end of which the runners shared a large galette, the Running Flan Club, which organises a race every Saturday morning with a flan at the finish line, or the Cookie Run Club, its cookie-themed counterpart, featuring the iconic treat of the moment, and even the Pattes Pressées (pressed cheese) Running Club (!), a 7 km run followed by a tasting of three cheeses, with commentary by a pro… Brands are not to be outdone, such as La Marzocco, the Rolls Royce of espresso machines, which organised a race with Salomon footwear in Marseille on the 4th February to mark the opening of its pop-up store. Registrations, exclusively on social media, went faster than the runners themselves…
While some (those over 40) will inevitably question the meaning of these activities that combine sport and calories, others will see them as a sign of a marked generational penchant for new experiences to be shared and dominated by sporting performance, the ultimate way to experience reality, as well as a definite attraction to the bizarre, the incongruous, the strange, the contradictory, the oxymoron, each perceived as a promise of personal fulfilment. I am different, therefore I am.