Abled: The Blake Leeper Story
Meet Blake Leeper, a medal-winning Paralympian sprinter and world record holder in the 400m. Born with both legs missing below the knee, Leeper embraced sports from a young age, playing baseball and basketball, but did not turn his eye to competitive running till his late teens. He quickly became a major competitor in the 100m, 200m, and 400m sprints, earning a silver and bronze medal at the 2012 London Paralympics. After a non-performance drug suspension scuttled his dream for the 2016 Rio games, Leeper announced his intention to compete at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics against “able-bodied” runners. But despite the one-time precedent set by fellow blade runner Oscar Pistorius at the 2012 Olympics, World Athletics, the sport’s governing body, claims Leeper’s blades give him an advantage over non-disabled runners—a misconception that still persists, particularly among the uninformed public. Using candid interviews, incisive reporting, and rigorous scientific testing, director Einar Thorsteinsson and Blake Leeper reveal the deliberate biases faced by disabled athletes who want to compete against the able-bodied, and the dubious science and deceptive publicity used to bar them from cross competitions.
Director/Producer Einar Thorsteinsson and Union Editorial