Clark Boyd

Clark Boyd

Clark Boyd is a reporter for The World. From advances in technology to the ups and downs of the markets, he has reported from many different countries for the show. He is now based out of the Boston newsroom.

  • |
  • ALL POSTS

US Ambassador to Finland Goes Great Guns

Bruce Oreck ProBody cover

US Ambassador Bruce Oreck in Finland's ProBody Magazine

US diplomacy in Finland has never been stronger.

At least if the bulging biceps of the US Ambassador to Finland are anything to go by.

Bruce Oreck, former attorney and former Obama fundraiser, took up his post in 2009. That last name might be familiar; he’s the son of David Oreck, the vacuum cleaner manufacturer.

As a diplomat, Bruce Oreck’s focused heavily on environmental issues.

And, for Christmas, the nearly 60-year-old Oreck posted this on YouTube…seated alongside his wife, Cody.

Friends like to say that Oreck’s big personality is matched only by his arms.

You see, he’s also a former professional body-builder. ProBody Magazine, a Finnish body-building monthly, got Oreck to pose for its latest issue.

Talk about “gun”-boat diplomacy…

A spokesman for the US Embassy in Helsinki assured The Washington Post that no photo-shopping was involved at all.

The Ambassador, the spokesman told the Post, “places tremendous emphasis on staying in shape.”

Not prone to shyness, the Ambassador also used one of the muscle-shots in a holiday gag card to close friends.

Oh, and we should also note that this isn’t the first time Oreck’s flexed his muscles for the Finnish media.

A while back he posed completely shirtless for another Finnish magazine.

The title of that photo shoot?

Mr. Amerikka.

As Frederick the Great, the former King of Prussia, once quipped:

“Diplomacy without arms is like music without instruments.”

If that’s the case, it’s fair to say that Bruce Oreck is nothing less than a symphony.

Discussion

One comment for “US Ambassador to Finland Goes Great Guns”

  • phlegma

    Hey, I realize this was a light news piece, and I enjoyed it… further, I do not mean to disrespect Ambassador Oreck or his accomplishments in the fields of law, business, and fund-raising, but I guess the story came too soon after the tragic circumstances surrounding the death of Ambassador Chris Stevens, in September.  The contrasts of the two men’s careers with the State Dept. are too huge to dismiss.  From what I have read about Chris Stevens, he would be among the last to engage in the in-house resentments about career Foreign Service ambassadors versus political appointees, but you also have to wonder what impression that makes in the receiving country.