Let’s rewind. The premise of the Bodycheck was supposedly educational. They would bring a real teen on stage to "normalize" the diversity of the human body. Flat chests, broad shoulders, hip dips—Dr. Sommer explained it all with the passion of a botanist describing a fern.
The term is particularly revealing. In hockey, a bodycheck is a physical maneuver to stop an opponent; in Chantal’s vocabulary, it becomes a euphemism for sexual prowess or physical desirability. However, her aggressive, almost competitive framing — “That’s me, boys” — betrays a deep insecurity. She is not describing an intimate encounter but performing a script she has absorbed from magazines, movies, and peer talk. The addition of “exclusive” — a word borrowed from tabloid journalism — further underscores the idea that she views her own life as breaking news, something to be packaged and consumed. bravo dr sommer bodycheck thats me boys exclusive