Media-fuelled culture war clichés about “middle-aged men in Lycra” are doing real harm to public health by distorting how people think about cycling and active travel, Sir Chris Whitty — England’s chief medical officer and the familiar face of the UK’s Covid-19 briefings of the yesteryear — has warned, urging people to ignore tired stereotypes and instead focus on “the maths” and “data which nobody can dispute”.
Speaking at a conference in York a day before the launch of the NHS’s 10-year health plan, the epidemiologist said: “If active travel is seen as something which is simply the reserve of middle-aged, Lycra-clad people cycling possibly too fast around the park, that completely misses the point of actually where the huge health gains are.
“There are some areas where you can send a debate from a cultural war into a much more day-to-day one by actually saying, ‘OK guys, but this is the maths,’ and ensuring that you do so with facts which people find surprising.
“So for example, the culture wars will always try and paint the person who’s in favour of active transport, and let’s say cycling, as middle-class, entitled, speeding like a bad person. What they don’t see is a woman in a wheelchair who actually benefits even more from the activity that we’re talking about.”
Whitty said physical activity was “one of the most impressive things you can do to preserve health of all forms, physical and mental,” and that the best way to increase activity levels was to embed it into everyday life — through walking, cycling or wheeling to shops, schools or places of worship, reports The Guardian.
“The people who benefit most from any form of activity are people who are doing none,” he said. “And the next group who benefit most are the people who are doing a very small amount, who might do a bit more.
“The second group of people who benefit most are those who are teetering on the brink of ill health, or are in ill health which could accelerate from under them. And for many of those people, a small amount of activity is going to be very hard work, but it is going to be remarkably powerful at preventing and in many cases, reversing the health conditions they have.”

He also urged transport planners to look beyond big ticket infrastructure schemes and instead address everyday accessibility barriers: “We’ve got to do is build between the places people care about: from their homes to their shops, to their place of worship, to the school and so on. We’ve got to think about that in a really serious way.”
“Transport planners should not just focus on bigger projects such as bike lanes,” he said, “but also on everyday issues such as uneven pavements, which might put off someone with mobility issues from walking a short distance.”
Whitty’s comments echo his 2022 call to “get cycling to fight obesity”, when he told a public health conference that “the idea that the UK is a country you can’t actually do cycling is clearly incorrect.”
Back then, citing Department for Transport data showing that cycling in 2019 had dropped to less than a quarter of the 24 billion kilometres ridden in 1949, he urged people to return to the culture of everyday cycling seen in the 1950s and ’60s — adding that active travel during Covid had shown what was possible with the right political will.
“One of the things that is the most effective ways of improving health – whether it’s cardiovascular, cancer or mental health – is physical exercise,” he said. “And active transport is a particularly important way to do this because it builds it into people’s normal routines of daily life, rather than being seen as something that is separate.”

The role of active travel in improving public health has come under increasing political scrutiny in recent years. In October 2024, then transport secretary Louise Haigh accused the previous Conservative government of pursuing “poisonous culture wars” between cyclists and drivers, and pledged to “take back streets” for all road users.
A few weeks earlier, Thames Valley Police came under fire for a neighbourhood enforcement operation called “Operation LYCRA”, a name that was accused of stoking anti-cycling culture war narratives despite its actual focus on e-scooters and moped-style vehicles.
Cycling UK and other campaigners had previously warned that former prime minister Rishi Sunak’s approach to active travel was “politically motivated”, citing the 2023 ‘Plan for Drivers’ and anti-LTN rhetoric. At the time, the charity’s chief executive Sarah Mitchell described such moves as “lazy” and “divisive”, adding: “We are hopeful that this kind of rhetoric will be put to bed once and for all.”
Haigh’s successor, Heidi Alexander, meanwhile, has been described by cycling campaigners as a strong advocate for safe streets, and has promised to put active travel “front and centre” of the Labour government’s integrated transport strategy.
Whitty has also today commented on, and backed, 12 of England’s regional mayors coming together on an “unprecedented” plan for a national active travel network.
Announced formally this morning by Active Travel England it would focus initially on schemes that help children to walk, cycle or scoot to school safely, and Whitty suggested that it has the potential to “significantly improve” public health and benefit 20 million people.
“Increasing physical activity has health benefits across the life course,” Whitty said. “As part of this, we need to make walking and cycling more accessible, and safer, as well as access to green space easier and more equitable. This will help remove barriers to improving physical activity levels and could significantly improve the health of England’s increasingly urban population.”
All of England’s non-London regional mayors, excluding one from Reform UK, have backed the efforts to devolve transport planning and work with Active Travel England to implement schemes.
While one Reform UK mayor isn’t involved, former pro boxer-turned-Reform mayor in Hull and East Yorkshire, Luke Campbell, has joined nine Labour mayors and two Conservative mayors in supporting the joint pledge to “work together to improve our streets for everyone, for the benefit of the health, wellbeing and connectedness of our communities”.
The initial focus will be improving trips to and from school, with a pledge to create a combined 3,500 miles of routes safely linking schools to homes, town and city centres, and transport hubs.





















46 thoughts on ““Middle-aged men in Lycra” stereotypes and media culture war clichés about cycling are harming public health, says Chris Whitty”
Oddly enough, you aren’t
Oddly enough, you aren’t allowed to make comments about overweight men in replica football shirts on places like BBC Sport HYS. Such comments are damaging to the televised football product, it’s promotion of a sedentary lifestyle and it’s many junk food and high calorific drink manufacturer sponsors.
Mr Blackbird wrote:
And, in busier commuting locations, most people are either not middle-aged, men, or in lycra.
I’m tempted to start my own acronym that is a bit more specific…
AARDVARKS – Any Aged Reprobate Driving Aggressively Risking Killing Somebody
I’m still sticking with my
I’m still sticking with my coinage of MAMIPS – Middle-Aged Men in Polyester Slacks.
I prefer MAMIES
I prefer MAMIES
Middle Aged Men In Everyday Slacks
PUFFIN , chapeau Alexei Sayle
PUFFIN , chapeau Alexei Sayle
Whenever I get a football
Whenever I get a football shirt wearing nobhead being aggressive I always ask why they walk around with their crush name on their back. It takes a while for the h’appeny to drop.
I have nothing against a person’s sexuality, but quite often they do.
If the worries about
If the worries about refineries closing do come to anything then there’s going to be a petrol shortage. I’m already seeing stories about possible rationing, which will in turn fuel any panic buying before it comes into force. You’ll see a change in atitude to cyclists if this happens.
The roads in Brum during the
The roads in Brum during the fuel blockades became fabulous. They’d be shot as terrorists these days though.
They were fabulous in Cardiff
They were fabulous in Cardiff as well. Had an A road all to myself one time. The number of people that went back on the bike to get to work was staggering; loads were pulled out of garden sheds where they’d lain for years. Local bike shops did a roaring trade in repairs and new bikes. Cardiff has a north-south cycle route called the Taff Trail running through it. That got very busy while the blockades were on. Unfortunately most people relapsed into their old ways once it ended. Some still kept cycling though.
The Taff Trail runs through
The Taff Trail runs through some amazing countryside too. I went there last year. Would recommend it to everyone.
I’ve read a lot of op-eds
I’ve read a lot of op-eds about how the fuel protests and the farmers’ protests have been treated so very differently from – say – Extinction Rebellion (or Palestine Action, for that matter).
Or even organised ULEZ camera
Or even organised ULEZ camera vandalisation
I don’t care. I ride in what
I don’t care. I ride in what’s practical and comfortable. MAMIL is fine, the best way to deal with this sort of thing is to own it not complain.
Where can I buy my MAMIL logo shirt?
Totally agree. Lycra is
Totally agree. Lycra is comfortable, aero and easy to wash. Sometimes I am also a MAMISSWAH (middle aged man in skin suit with aero helmet). People who scorn cycling can call me whatever they like. Lots of them are PIGWEBs (person in Golf with expanded belly).
Quote:
What about the middle-aged men who don’t wear lycra? Don’t we get a voice?
I still prefer the name
I still prefer the name “spandex” over lycra – way more rock ‘n roll and thereby more in keeping with the “lycra lout” & “habitual offender when it comes to traffic laws” stereotype (plus you get to chuck the odd TV out of a hotel room window).
I think I’ll raise it as an agenda item at the next Evil Cyclists Lobby meeting.
“Spandex Lout”? i remember
“Spandex Lout”? i remember seeing them back in 1987, supporting Poison, if I recall, on the X-Rated Cesspit tour. Big hair, bigger attitude, biggest guitar solos.
Yeah their set at that year’s
Yeah their set at that year’s Donnington Monsters of Rock was legendary. The lead singer, Alan “no tax” Metcalfe, bit the head off a motorist during the guitar solo on “RLJing for Life”. Iconic.
Clem Fandango wrote:
was Stumpy the drummer then? They lost a lot of drummers. One died in an unfortunate disc brake accident.
the little onion wrote:
and another in an unfortunate
and another in an unfortunate inner tube replacement incident
Did the one who spontaneously
Did the one who spontaneously combusted during an over-zealous heat training regime come before or after the one who quit music to pursue a career in fashion of UCI non-compliant knee length compression socks?
ROOTminus1 wrote:
I preferred the early stuff anyway.
Was that when they were
Was that when they were performing as The Raleighmen?
mdavidford wrote:
One of them used the frame of a Raleigh Chopper as a bass guitar as I recall.
brooksby wrote:
Only when there’s a World Naked Bike Ride on.
“….former pro boxer-turned
“….former pro boxer-turned-Reform mayor in Hull and East Yorkshire, Luke Campbell, has joined nine Labour mayors and two Conservative mayors in supporting the joint pledge to “work together to improve our streets for everyone, for the benefit of the health, wellbeing and connectedness of our communities”…..”
I suspect he might not remain within Reform for long. He doesn’t sound like their sort of people.
I suspect he might not remain
I suspect he might not remain within Reform for long. He doesn’t sound like their sort of people
Fortunately for him, what they all actually mean is completed with: …as long as no hard-working motorist is inconvenienced
Yes the Mayors’ statement is
Yes the Mayors’ statement is about low-ambition stuff that will not change the motor vehicle-dominated status quo.
I hope that at least some of the Mayors want to go beyond a few road crossings and enable cycling between junctions, not just at them.
It makes me proud to think
It makes me proud to think that our regional mayor is the only one that is willing to stand up to the cycling lobby and England’s Chief Medical Officer🙄
It’s good that Chris Whitty
It’s good that Chris Whitty is pro-cycling.
It’s disappointing that Chris Whitty feels the need to bang on about lycra.
Spandex!
Spandex!
Clem Fandango wrote:
You secretly want to wear a cape, don’t you?
HarrogateSpa wrote:
You’ve missed the context of what he’s saying, he’s not banging on about lycra (or spandex, if you insist, Clem), rather he’s saying that the media should stop banging on about it and portraying cycling as solely the preserve of middle-aged people in the aforementioned fabric as this makes others feel that cycling is not for them.
Thank you but I haven’t
Thank you but I haven’t misunderstood what he was saying, although I accept it’s a question of interpretation.
In my view there was an element of ‘don’t hate the mum and children who are cycling to school, hate those MAMILs over there’.
There is no need to set up a contrast between ‘good’ and ‘bad’ cyclists – just set out the evidence and the benefits of cycling.
I respectfully disagree, I
I respectfully disagree, I don’t think he was saying that at all. “So for example, the culture wars will always try and paint the person who’s in favour of active transport, and let’s say cycling, as middle-class, entitled, speeding like a bad person.” It’s not saying that’s what cyclists are like, quite the opposite, he’s saying that that is the false picture that the anti-cyclists are painting.
Rendel Harris wrote:
I agree with your interpretation – the MSM focuses on MAMILs as being an easier target for their ire as it’s more difficult to criticise commuters. Of course, it’s a false dichotomy as most of the things that benefit MAMILs also benefits commuters. Infrastructure would be something that doesn’t provide much benefit to MAMILs who are aiming to go quickly though as most of the time it’s faster to use the roads instead.
If anything will turn the
If anything will turn the British public off more than mamils it’s “… actually saying, ‘OK guys, but this is the maths”
“People in this country have
“People in this country have had enough of mathematicians with numbers saying they know what adds up…”
mdavidford wrote:
Pffft! I’ve seen so-called mathematicians declaring that you can slice up a ball into five pieces and then stick them together to create two balls the same size as the original: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banach%E2%80%93Tarski_paradox
Codswallop! You’ll be
Codswallop! You’ll be claiming to have squared a circle next!
I got an A at O-level, but A
I got an A at O-level, but A-level maths was beyond me… All this stuff – block transfer computations, bistromathics, etc? Eeek.
Chris Witty – facts, science
Chris Witty – facts, science and being right about stuff since 2009.
David9694 wrote:
👍
David9694 wrote:
And Chris Whitty is pretty good too.
If this government were truly
If this government were truly interested in change, and joined up government between
Department of Transport,
Department of Health,
Department of Culture Media and Sport,
They would change road users attitude and behaviour by changing mainstream and social media output by using the existing Equality legislation to make cyclists a protected characteristic.