Running
There’s a New Team of Distance Runners
This Under Armour Coach Is Leading the Way for Women in Running
Carolyn Su Is Limitless
What Makes the RUNGRL Community Limitless?
These Runners Were Not Prepared to Love Non-Alcoholic Beer
Ultrarunner Tim Tollefson Opens Up About His Struggle with Body Dysmorphia
Watch Kyle Richardson’s Exploratory Run in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains
Jim Walmsley Wants to Be the First American Man to Win the Ultra-Trail Mont Blanc
Kyle Richardson Has Summited Boulder’s Green Mountain Over 700 Times
This Couple’s Trail Running Photography Will Inspire You to Explore the Swiss Alps
Why Run 100 Miles When You Could Run 200?
This Trans Trail-Running Team Is Confronting Hatred with Joy
Braveheart Runners Gives New Energy to Kenyan Runners’ Racing Dreams
The Trans Canada Trail Connects Canadians to Nature and Each Other
These Athletes Want to Take Triathlon to the Next Level
Ultrarunning Through Wyoming’s Longest Migration Corridors
One Runner of Color’s Internal Monologue
This Drummer Finds Rhythm on the Trails
These Veterans Find Solace in Trail Running
Lessons Learned from Running Across America
Why Run 100 Miles When You Could Run 200?
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“I want to see if I am made of tough stuff,” says ultrarunner Jason Thienel at the beginning of The NoNo, a documentary about his attempt to complete the No Business 100—a race which ascends roughly 14,500 vertical feet through the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area in Tennessee and Kentucky—twice in one push, a 200-mile quest. The film, from Jamie Jean and Elliot Davis of Blackfip Creative, captures the joys and challenges of ultrarunning and features interviews with both Thienel and his wife, Amber.