Los Angeles Times

A spin on stardom

The pandemic made Peloton guru Cody Rigsby famous. Now he’s showing off his dance moves.

- BY MEREDITH BLAKE

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Cody Rigsby was rarely recognized on New York’s Fire Island. It was a sanctuary, a place where “nobody knew my quote-unquote celebrity,” says the Peloton instructor, who has been inspiring users to climb imaginary hills since 2014.

“A lot of my demographi­c are women in the 30-to-50 age range that live in suburbia or middle America,” he says, noting that he’d sometimes get noticed while visiting his mom in North Carolina. “There are not a lot of those on a very gay island.”

Things changed when COVID-19 struck. As people looked for ways to stay fit at home, Peloton grew exponentia­lly — from 1.6 million users in early 2020 to 5.9 million in June 2021.

So did Rigsby’s fame: Something

about his exuberant teaching style resonated with people during a period of isolation and uncertaint­y.

This new reality dawned on Rigsby when he returned to Fire Island this summer, after a year spent doing little besides going to the empty Peloton studio in Manhattan. Instead of the blissful anonymity he once enjoyed, people would come up to him at brunch to ask for a picture. Sometimes they were celebritie­s.

“I have to put a little bit more of a guard up now,” he says via video conference from Los Angeles, where he’s capping off a lifechangi­ng year with a stint on “Dancing With the Stars.” “Because if I’m out with friends and I’m having a good time, which probably includes drinking” — he rolls his eyes for comic effect — “I don’t want to be too messy.”

This self-deprecatin­g candor

[Rigsby, is part of what has made Rigsby, 34, an unusually approachab­le fitness guru — a virtual confidant who helps distract from the pain of a grueling workout by trashtalki­ng Justin Timberlake and sharing cute stories about his boyfriend.

According to social media metrics, he is Peloton’s most popular teacher, with nearly a million Instagram followers. His 30-minute Britney Spears class has been taken 650,000 times — more than any other of the same length. Kristen Welker of NBC News took Rigsby’s classes to help her prepare to moderate the second presidenti­al debate in 2020.

Not bad for a job Rigsby took to earn a few hundred bucks while trying to make it as a profession­al dancer.

Like members of the boy bands that Rigsby so often talks about, each Peloton instructor has a distinct personalit­y type and teaching style: There’s the Spiritual One, the Quiet One, the Technical One. Rigsby is the Fun One, effortless­ly playing the role of “everybody’s gay best friend,” as colleague Emma Lovewell puts it.

Tall and strapping, Rigsby has Mickey Mouse ears tattooed on his arm. While other instructor­s focus on form or motivation­al pep talks, Rigsby peppers his class with kitschy catchphras­es, stray pop culture observatio­ns and rants about his personal pet peeves. He’s been known to sound off on everything from Olive Garden breadstick­s to the horrors of the Chuck E. Cheese ball pit. In his popular themed class XOXO Cody, Rigsby spouts sex and love advice to a boisterous pop playlist.

More than anything, he loves Spears. Whenever her music plays during class — which is often — he exhorts his followers, “When we play Britney, we f— s— up.”

Rigsby’s lightheart­ed approach has endeared him to users, who upload his humorous diatribes to TikTok and YouTube. On Etsy, you can buy Cody Rigsby prayer candles and mugs. There’s even a fan club.

Still, when Rigsby was announced as a “DWTS” cast member in September, some scoffed at the idea of a spin instructor as a bonafide “star.”

“Celebrity isn’t the same celebrity it was when we started this show. It is a much bigger world than just people who are on television,” says co-executive producer Deena Katz, who has increasing­ly cast inf luencers and other personalit­ies who don’t fall into traditiona­l categories of celebrity.

Lovewell, who has known Rigsby for about a decade, thinks there is something unique about the intimate yet virtual relationsh­ip between Peloton instructor­s and their audience.

“You’re encouragin­g them; you’re making them uncomforta­ble and out of breath and sweaty. They’re trusting you with their bodies, their minds and their hearts. It’s a very different experience than just watching somebody on a movie screen.”

Part of Rigsby’s appeal is his own story of triumph over adversity. His father died of a drug overdose when he was a few months old. He was raised by a single mom — first in Burbank, then in Greensboro, N.C. Money was tight, and there were periods of homelessne­ss.

The hardship “forced me to step up to the plate and be responsibl­e for myself at a very early age,” says Rigsby, who is more earnest and subdued in conversati­on than his exuberant Peloton persona would suggest. He speaks thoughtful­ly about how therapy helped him work through the emotional baggage of his childhood, and how he relocated his mom, Cindy — who struggles with a variety of health problems — to Brooklyn, “so she can be comfortabl­e and have as much joy as she can.”

Rigsby says he was always a natural performer, teaching his sixth-grade classmates the choreograp­hy he picked up from Spears’ videos. Though there was rarely enough money for dance lessons, he became involved in show choir and musical theater. “I really thrived in those spaces and got to express myself in really conservati­ve North Carolina,” he says. “Even though people made fun of me for being gay, I still loved being onstage.”

After college, this led him to New York to train as a dancer, juggling profession­al gigs (performing with Nicki Minaj at a Victoria’s Secret fashion show) with whatever side hustle would help pay his bills (caterwaite­r jobs).

Lovewell, who first bonded with Rigsby when they were hired to dance at a lavish Venetian-themed wedding in Washington, D.C., was immediatel­y struck by his sense of humor. “He says the things you’re thinking but would never say out loud, but it’s not mean,” she says. “It’s this delicate balance.”

Rigsby was working at the Box, a nightclub on the Lower East Side, when he heard about a new fitness company looking for performers interested in teaching. He sent in a headshot to Peloton, figuring it would be a good side hustle, landing the job after a 10-minute interview. He remembers inviting his friends — “twentysome­thing gay New Yorkers who will read you for filth if something’s bad” — to an early trial class. Within a year, he was teaching Peloton full time.

“They took a chance on me, and it paid off. And I took a chance on them, and it redirected my life in a big way. It feels very divine, in a way.”

Peloton is “fitness meets entertainm­ent,” says Rigsby, one of several instructor­s with a background in performanc­e (British instructor Bradley Rose even appeared in a Hallmark Christmas movie). “There’s a lot of people who can give a credible [fitness] class. But how do you keep people engaged? How do you keep people wanting to come back for more? I think it is the stories that we tell, the vulnerabil­ity that we show, the laughter that we share.”

“DWTS,” where he’s competed against Melanie “Sporty Spice” Chisholm, has been the realizatio­n of a childhood dream — literally. As a kid, he used to have a recurring dream in which he was friends with the Spice Girls. “I think it stems from watching ‘Spice World’ so many times,” he says.

Still, the “DWTS” experience has been challengin­g. For the first few weeks, he was flying to L.A. to tape the show, then returning to New York to teach Peloton. Worn down, Rigsby got a breakthrou­gh case of COVID-19 and was forced to compete virtually from his apartment, dancing with partner Cheryl Burke via split screen — to Spears, no less. “I’m still gutted,” he says. To maintain his sanity, he’s staying put in L.A. for the remainder of the show, teaching from a makeshift studio in Peloton’s Pasadena showroom.

The judges have not been particular­ly kind to Rigsby, but his scores are improving. An avid fan of “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” Rigsby is savvy enough about reality TV to take it in stride. “I have to remind myself not to be a victim of a television storyline,” he says, “and to have fun, because that’s what this is all about. To quote myself: ‘It’s not that deep, boo.’ ”

However his “DWTS” journey ends, he has been introduced to a larger audience through the show, and it has opened up opportunit­ies beyond the bike.

Rigsby isn’t the type to have a five-year plan, but he’d love to do something else on TV, maybe as a judge or host. “If RuPaul is listening, I’m completely open to doing ‘Celebrity Drag Race,’ ” he says. “I just want whatever I do to be rooted in bringing joy and good energy into the world.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CODY RIGSBY, photograph­ed at AKA West Hollywood, aims to bring joy to world, including on “Dancing With the Stars.”
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CODY RIGSBY, photograph­ed at AKA West Hollywood, aims to bring joy to world, including on “Dancing With the Stars.”
 ?? Christophe­r Willard ABC ??
Christophe­r Willard ABC
 ?? Eric McCandless ABC via Getty Images ?? CODY RIGSBY channels his Peloton career in a “Dancing With Stars” routine.
Eric McCandless ABC via Getty Images CODY RIGSBY channels his Peloton career in a “Dancing With Stars” routine.

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