Fitness expert and single mother Ellen Latham suffered a major career setback at 40 when she was suddenly fired from her dream job as an exercise physiologist at a high-end spa in Miami.
“I was devastated,” Latham recounted to NBC’s Joelle Garguilo during an interview for Know Your Value. “I really didn’t know what I was going to do.”
But Latham didn’t give up. Fourteen years later, Latham founded Orangetheory Fitness, a science-based fitness franchise that now boasts over one million members and 1,200 studios around the globe.
Orangetheory combines running, rowing and strength training, while a heart rate monitor ensures that you are optimizing your workout.
The evolution of the franchise is detailed in the new documentary “Momentum Shift.”
“It’s almost overwhelming,” said Latham, now 63. “We’re getting so many members commenting on how this changed their life, not just with weight-loss…”
But it wasn’t always easy.
Latham’s comeback career was actually her second meteoric rise. Latham had successfully taught aerobics classes throughout the 80s. She appeared on TV as a fitness expert. And of course, she had her dream job at the spa.
“I thought: I had arrived. I had 30 employees…I was the ‘it’ person in fitness,” Latham said. “Of course, then I lost everything.”
Latham was fired in 1996.At the time, Latham was raising her 9-year-old son Evan by herself.
Even today, the odds are against women who are mid-career and searching for a new job. In fact, mothers are 79 percent less likely to be hired than non-mothers, according to a 2012 study. And ageism at work begins at age 40 for women (as opposed to age 45 for men), after which many employees are no longer considered for training or promotions.
But Latham was not fazed. Instead, she decided to set out on her own.
“Women may be thinking ‘but it’s so hard out there!’ And it is, but you’ve got to keep pushing,” Latham said. “As a female, you have to realize that you can do big things, and you have to believe you deserve it.”
“Momentum Shift” details the lives of Latham, an Orangetheory coach named Joe Oniwar, and a member named Kristen. Each subject discussed how Orangetheory changed their lives, and how they experienced a complete attitude shift during a low point in their lives.
After Oniwar’s cousin was killed by gun violence in his home neighborhood Compton, Calif., he turned to sports as an escape. Pro football, however, left him with several head injuries and unable to form sentences. Coaching at Orangetheory gave him a fresh start.









