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#1
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The Biggest Loser - Episode 2
I don't know what to make of this show. It really is quite amazing
watching what these people are willing to put themselves through and the trainers that are pushing them to kill themselves to try to win $200K. IMO, the whole thing is unethical and I wouldn't be suprised if they wound up killing someone. Do sane doctors believe it's ok to do this to morbidly obese people? Then there are the trainers. The girl is a real trip. They are all on some type of carb restriced diet, though exactly what they eat is left a mystery. So, the second week, they lose very little compared to the first week. The guy who lost 22 lbs the first week, gained back 3 this week and broke down crying like it was a total failure and the end of the world. The trainer proceeds to tell them all that it's because she pushed them so hard they hit a plateau early. What a joke. Obviously she doesn't understand anything about low carb or she would know that the first week you typically lose a lot more because of water loss, which doesn't recur. Perhaps the most amazing thing is the unrealistic expectations these people all have. It took them 15 years to get fat and they expect to lose 10 lbs a week, just because they are killing themselves with all kinds of excercise that is very likely only marginally helpful in losing weight. If I were doing this, I'd have them on Atkins and doing as much aerobic excercise as they can comfortably handle, not feeding them God knows what and making a 400lb guy do crunchs till he throws up. And I bet they'd lose as much or more weight with a fraction of the effort and physical risk. I wonder what viewers make of all this. I envision millions of fat people sitting at home saying "If this is how hard it is and what I have to do to lose weight, why bother at all?" And as for the contest itself, it makes little sense when you have huge 300-400 lb guys competing against women that way half that. How could the smaller women possibly win? |
#2
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Last week after watching the 1st show, it gave me the motivation to push
myself a little harder. I got in this shape because I didn't push myself., it shows us that we are all capable of much more but I don't think I could do what those people are doing,,,money is a real incentive here. I do enjoy watching the show. Will watch it this evening. -- Started LC Sept 26/04 189/172.5/125 "Chet Hayes" wrote in message om... I don't know what to make of this show. It really is quite amazing watching what these people are willing to put themselves through and the trainers that are pushing them to kill themselves to try to win $200K. IMO, the whole thing is unethical and I wouldn't be suprised if they wound up killing someone. Do sane doctors believe it's ok to do this to morbidly obese people? Then there are the trainers. The girl is a real trip. They are all on some type of carb restriced diet, though exactly what they eat is left a mystery. So, the second week, they lose very little compared to the first week. The guy who lost 22 lbs the first week, gained back 3 this week and broke down crying like it was a total failure and the end of the world. The trainer proceeds to tell them all that it's because she pushed them so hard they hit a plateau early. What a joke. Obviously she doesn't understand anything about low carb or she would know that the first week you typically lose a lot more because of water loss, which doesn't recur. Perhaps the most amazing thing is the unrealistic expectations these people all have. It took them 15 years to get fat and they expect to lose 10 lbs a week, just because they are killing themselves with all kinds of excercise that is very likely only marginally helpful in losing weight. If I were doing this, I'd have them on Atkins and doing as much aerobic excercise as they can comfortably handle, not feeding them God knows what and making a 400lb guy do crunchs till he throws up. And I bet they'd lose as much or more weight with a fraction of the effort and physical risk. I wonder what viewers make of all this. I envision millions of fat people sitting at home saying "If this is how hard it is and what I have to do to lose weight, why bother at all?" And as for the contest itself, it makes little sense when you have huge 300-400 lb guys competing against women that way half that. How could the smaller women possibly win? |
#3
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Last week after watching the 1st show, it gave me the motivation to push
myself a little harder. I got in this shape because I didn't push myself., it shows us that we are all capable of much more but I don't think I could do what those people are doing,,,money is a real incentive here. I do enjoy watching the show. Will watch it this evening. -- Started LC Sept 26/04 189/172.5/125 "Chet Hayes" wrote in message om... I don't know what to make of this show. It really is quite amazing watching what these people are willing to put themselves through and the trainers that are pushing them to kill themselves to try to win $200K. IMO, the whole thing is unethical and I wouldn't be suprised if they wound up killing someone. Do sane doctors believe it's ok to do this to morbidly obese people? Then there are the trainers. The girl is a real trip. They are all on some type of carb restriced diet, though exactly what they eat is left a mystery. So, the second week, they lose very little compared to the first week. The guy who lost 22 lbs the first week, gained back 3 this week and broke down crying like it was a total failure and the end of the world. The trainer proceeds to tell them all that it's because she pushed them so hard they hit a plateau early. What a joke. Obviously she doesn't understand anything about low carb or she would know that the first week you typically lose a lot more because of water loss, which doesn't recur. Perhaps the most amazing thing is the unrealistic expectations these people all have. It took them 15 years to get fat and they expect to lose 10 lbs a week, just because they are killing themselves with all kinds of excercise that is very likely only marginally helpful in losing weight. If I were doing this, I'd have them on Atkins and doing as much aerobic excercise as they can comfortably handle, not feeding them God knows what and making a 400lb guy do crunchs till he throws up. And I bet they'd lose as much or more weight with a fraction of the effort and physical risk. I wonder what viewers make of all this. I envision millions of fat people sitting at home saying "If this is how hard it is and what I have to do to lose weight, why bother at all?" And as for the contest itself, it makes little sense when you have huge 300-400 lb guys competing against women that way half that. How could the smaller women possibly win? |
#4
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Last week after watching the 1st show, it gave me the motivation to push
myself a little harder. I got in this shape because I didn't push myself., it shows us that we are all capable of much more but I don't think I could do what those people are doing,,,money is a real incentive here. I do enjoy watching the show. Will watch it this evening. -- Started LC Sept 26/04 189/172.5/125 "Chet Hayes" wrote in message om... I don't know what to make of this show. It really is quite amazing watching what these people are willing to put themselves through and the trainers that are pushing them to kill themselves to try to win $200K. IMO, the whole thing is unethical and I wouldn't be suprised if they wound up killing someone. Do sane doctors believe it's ok to do this to morbidly obese people? Then there are the trainers. The girl is a real trip. They are all on some type of carb restriced diet, though exactly what they eat is left a mystery. So, the second week, they lose very little compared to the first week. The guy who lost 22 lbs the first week, gained back 3 this week and broke down crying like it was a total failure and the end of the world. The trainer proceeds to tell them all that it's because she pushed them so hard they hit a plateau early. What a joke. Obviously she doesn't understand anything about low carb or she would know that the first week you typically lose a lot more because of water loss, which doesn't recur. Perhaps the most amazing thing is the unrealistic expectations these people all have. It took them 15 years to get fat and they expect to lose 10 lbs a week, just because they are killing themselves with all kinds of excercise that is very likely only marginally helpful in losing weight. If I were doing this, I'd have them on Atkins and doing as much aerobic excercise as they can comfortably handle, not feeding them God knows what and making a 400lb guy do crunchs till he throws up. And I bet they'd lose as much or more weight with a fraction of the effort and physical risk. I wonder what viewers make of all this. I envision millions of fat people sitting at home saying "If this is how hard it is and what I have to do to lose weight, why bother at all?" And as for the contest itself, it makes little sense when you have huge 300-400 lb guys competing against women that way half that. How could the smaller women possibly win? |
#5
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What they want on TV is drama. They don't care a dime whether people are doing
tings that are really effective as long as it's good drama and "fun" to watch. Any weight loss achieved while they film this program would be kind of a side-effect. We can only hope that those 400lb plus people watching TV at home realise that what this TV program is really about. ;-) Chet Hayes wrote: I don't know what to make of this show. It really is quite amazing watching what these people are willing to put themselves through and the trainers that are pushing them to kill themselves to try to win $200K. IMO, the whole thing is unethical and I wouldn't be suprised if they wound up killing someone. Do sane doctors believe it's ok to do this to morbidly obese people? Then there are the trainers. The girl is a real trip. They are all on some type of carb restriced diet, though exactly what they eat is left a mystery. So, the second week, they lose very little compared to the first week. The guy who lost 22 lbs the first week, gained back 3 this week and broke down crying like it was a total failure and the end of the world. The trainer proceeds to tell them all that it's because she pushed them so hard they hit a plateau early. What a joke. Obviously she doesn't understand anything about low carb or she would know that the first week you typically lose a lot more because of water loss, which doesn't recur. Perhaps the most amazing thing is the unrealistic expectations these people all have. It took them 15 years to get fat and they expect to lose 10 lbs a week, just because they are killing themselves with all kinds of excercise that is very likely only marginally helpful in losing weight. If I were doing this, I'd have them on Atkins and doing as much aerobic excercise as they can comfortably handle, not feeding them God knows what and making a 400lb guy do crunchs till he throws up. And I bet they'd lose as much or more weight with a fraction of the effort and physical risk. I wonder what viewers make of all this. I envision millions of fat people sitting at home saying "If this is how hard it is and what I have to do to lose weight, why bother at all?" And as for the contest itself, it makes little sense when you have huge 300-400 lb guys competing against women that way half that. How could the smaller women possibly win? |
#6
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What they want on TV is drama. They don't care a dime whether people are doing
tings that are really effective as long as it's good drama and "fun" to watch. Any weight loss achieved while they film this program would be kind of a side-effect. We can only hope that those 400lb plus people watching TV at home realise that what this TV program is really about. ;-) Chet Hayes wrote: I don't know what to make of this show. It really is quite amazing watching what these people are willing to put themselves through and the trainers that are pushing them to kill themselves to try to win $200K. IMO, the whole thing is unethical and I wouldn't be suprised if they wound up killing someone. Do sane doctors believe it's ok to do this to morbidly obese people? Then there are the trainers. The girl is a real trip. They are all on some type of carb restriced diet, though exactly what they eat is left a mystery. So, the second week, they lose very little compared to the first week. The guy who lost 22 lbs the first week, gained back 3 this week and broke down crying like it was a total failure and the end of the world. The trainer proceeds to tell them all that it's because she pushed them so hard they hit a plateau early. What a joke. Obviously she doesn't understand anything about low carb or she would know that the first week you typically lose a lot more because of water loss, which doesn't recur. Perhaps the most amazing thing is the unrealistic expectations these people all have. It took them 15 years to get fat and they expect to lose 10 lbs a week, just because they are killing themselves with all kinds of excercise that is very likely only marginally helpful in losing weight. If I were doing this, I'd have them on Atkins and doing as much aerobic excercise as they can comfortably handle, not feeding them God knows what and making a 400lb guy do crunchs till he throws up. And I bet they'd lose as much or more weight with a fraction of the effort and physical risk. I wonder what viewers make of all this. I envision millions of fat people sitting at home saying "If this is how hard it is and what I have to do to lose weight, why bother at all?" And as for the contest itself, it makes little sense when you have huge 300-400 lb guys competing against women that way half that. How could the smaller women possibly win? |
#7
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What they want on TV is drama. They don't care a dime whether people are doing
tings that are really effective as long as it's good drama and "fun" to watch. Any weight loss achieved while they film this program would be kind of a side-effect. We can only hope that those 400lb plus people watching TV at home realise that what this TV program is really about. ;-) Chet Hayes wrote: I don't know what to make of this show. It really is quite amazing watching what these people are willing to put themselves through and the trainers that are pushing them to kill themselves to try to win $200K. IMO, the whole thing is unethical and I wouldn't be suprised if they wound up killing someone. Do sane doctors believe it's ok to do this to morbidly obese people? Then there are the trainers. The girl is a real trip. They are all on some type of carb restriced diet, though exactly what they eat is left a mystery. So, the second week, they lose very little compared to the first week. The guy who lost 22 lbs the first week, gained back 3 this week and broke down crying like it was a total failure and the end of the world. The trainer proceeds to tell them all that it's because she pushed them so hard they hit a plateau early. What a joke. Obviously she doesn't understand anything about low carb or she would know that the first week you typically lose a lot more because of water loss, which doesn't recur. Perhaps the most amazing thing is the unrealistic expectations these people all have. It took them 15 years to get fat and they expect to lose 10 lbs a week, just because they are killing themselves with all kinds of excercise that is very likely only marginally helpful in losing weight. If I were doing this, I'd have them on Atkins and doing as much aerobic excercise as they can comfortably handle, not feeding them God knows what and making a 400lb guy do crunchs till he throws up. And I bet they'd lose as much or more weight with a fraction of the effort and physical risk. I wonder what viewers make of all this. I envision millions of fat people sitting at home saying "If this is how hard it is and what I have to do to lose weight, why bother at all?" And as for the contest itself, it makes little sense when you have huge 300-400 lb guys competing against women that way half that. How could the smaller women possibly win? |
#8
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Last week after watching the 1st show, it gave me the motivation to push
myself a little harder I agree! It motivated me to work out more too. After working out a lot and then slacking off for the last month, I'm back at it full force. Jennifer |
#9
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Last week after watching the 1st show, it gave me the motivation to push
myself a little harder I agree! It motivated me to work out more too. After working out a lot and then slacking off for the last month, I'm back at it full force. Jennifer |
#10
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"Chet Hayes" wrote in message om... I don't know what to make of this show. It really is quite amazing watching what these people are willing to put themselves through and the trainers that are pushing them to kill themselves to try to win $200K. IMO, the whole thing is unethical and I wouldn't be suprised if they wound up killing someone. Do sane doctors believe it's ok to do this to morbidly obese people? Then there are the trainers. The girl is a real trip. They are all on some type of carb restriced diet, though exactly what they eat is left a mystery. So, the second week, they lose very little compared to the first week. The guy who lost 22 lbs the first week, gained back 3 this week and broke down crying like it was a total failure and the end of the world. The trainer proceeds to tell them all that it's because she pushed them so hard they hit a plateau early. What a joke. Obviously she doesn't understand anything about low carb or she would know that the first week you typically lose a lot more because of water loss, which doesn't recur. Perhaps the most amazing thing is the unrealistic expectations these people all have. It took them 15 years to get fat and they expect to lose 10 lbs a week, just because they are killing themselves with all kinds of excercise that is very likely only marginally helpful in losing weight. If I were doing this, I'd have them on Atkins and doing as much aerobic excercise as they can comfortably handle, not feeding them God knows what and making a 400lb guy do crunchs till he throws up. And I bet they'd lose as much or more weight with a fraction of the effort and physical risk. I wonder what viewers make of all this. I envision millions of fat people sitting at home saying "If this is how hard it is and what I have to do to lose weight, why bother at all?" And as for the contest itself, it makes little sense when you have huge 300-400 lb guys competing against women that way half that. How could the smaller women possibly win? I consider this show to be a real menace...truly dangerous for those gullible people who might try something similar. It simply isn't healthy to try to lose that much weight that fast, and some of those people are in such poor physical condition that I think they may risk a stroke or heart attack by following the advice of those "trainers." Those on the show may have been given thorough physical exams, but what all those viewers in TV-land??? In my opinion, this is a disgrace! It's one thing to have "reality" shows that simply attract viewers but it is entirely something else to promote something so dangerous. MaryL |
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