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Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Weight loss and other issues that don't quite fit in anywhere else. Off-topic welcome - just keep it nice!

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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Magna » Fri Nov 04, 2011 8:36 pm

There's also a Biggest Loser calorie-guessing game online. I'm guessing the show's actual game was different. The online one most involved guessing very minor calorie differences between similar foods, like kidney beans and lentils, or spinach and cauliflower. People should really be picking which of those foods they want based on preference, price, the recipe you're making, availability, etc. - not tiny caloric differences.
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby dene » Fri Nov 04, 2011 8:42 pm

Don't get me wrong. I realize Bonnie has been through alot. But so have MANY people. She's just 3 years older than I am. I looked at my husband one night and asked, "am I like that???" He laughed and said no. I've buried both my parents, my son was murdered at age 21, and I refuse to act like I deserve a pity party. What i don't understand is that at one time she'll brag about how she's tough and doesn't feel sorry for herself, and then she turns around and blubbers all over the tv screen.

Look at what Anna said about how she grew up. Talk about overcoming adversity. Everybody on the show has a story of one kind or another. I just want to yell at the TV, "Suck it up, Bonnie. Get over yourself and just do it." Actually, I do yell that at the TV sometimes. :roll:

Ok, end of rant. :lol:

Didn't you love Vinny's "worm" at the weigh in??? That was great! I just love how he keeps saying, "Yes, sir" and "No, sir" to the trainers. I think he's sweet. I didn't like John at first, but he's growing on me. My DH likes Antone alot. We can't settle on one favorite, because we like different things about each one. I can tell you who's NOT my favorite......you guessed it!
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Kyan » Fri Nov 04, 2011 9:52 pm

Magna wrote:People should really be picking which of those foods they want based on preference, price, the recipe you're making, availability, etc. - not tiny caloric differences.




Magna - I agree 100%!!

The Biggest Loser asked everyone what their favorite dinner was at the beginning of the show and then they brought the contestants up in groups of threes and they each individually had to guess how many calories were in each separate dinner totaled together. You would have fainted if you had seen the results!! An Italian dinner like the "Tour of Italy" from the Olive Garden was something like 2,100 calories. Three big cheeseburgers were over 2,000. The killer was the Mexican dinner which was just enchiladas, beans, rice and chips and salsa - which came to over 4,000!! Eeeeek!! This is ONE meal of the day!!

Of course I have read on the net that cheese fries can easily run upwards of 3,000 calories and that is just an APPETIZER for one meal! It really makes you think!
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Kyan » Fri Nov 04, 2011 9:56 pm

Magna wrote:Didn't you love Vinny's "worm" at the weigh in??? That was great! I just love how he keeps saying, "Yes, sir" and "No, sir" to the trainers. I think he's sweet. I didn't like John at first, but he's growing on me. My DH likes Antone alot. We can't settle on one favorite, because we like different things about each one. I can tell you who's NOT my favorite......you guessed it!


Oh I forgot about the worm! That was SOOO cool! Did you see how impressed Allison was? I was so glad they did a replay of that! I don't have a favorite yet, but by the end I will.

I have been in an email loop for something like 10 years and today the discussion was on health insurance and how it is slightly higher for smokers. I wrote a (sort of) rant about people and their health. Basically I wanted to know when people are supposed to take responsibility for their own health and well-being! I know several people who had heart attacks in the last few years and they were good about quitting smoking and watching their diet for about a month - and then it was back to smoking and eating deep fried foods and fatty foods and crap. Well... common sense says that if their doctor told them to change their lifestyle, there was a reason - and they stand a good chance of ending up in the hospital again with some $$$$ medical bills!!
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Magna » Fri Nov 04, 2011 9:59 pm

That game makes a lot more sense! A lot of restaurant meals (and foods for home consumption) are packed with calories, and most people have no idea. A lot of snacks do too (I'm thinking of some of those fancy coffee drinks that are basically just milkshakes.) A lot of it is probably portion size, but also an overemphasis on calorie-dense foods. And often the extra calorie-dense foods don't improve our enjoyment of the meal much if at all.
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby dene » Sat Nov 05, 2011 1:51 am

My husband's insurance has a plan that you can get a cheaper rate by entering into a "partnership" where you agree to a healthier lifestyle, working on areas that were targeted in a screening. Some people didn't join because they weren't willing to work on problem areas, even though the premium was cheaper!

I understand about not sticking with a plan, because I've gained back alot of the weight I lost several years ago. Working on returning to a healthier weight and want to keep it that way this time. I know nobody force-feeds me and it's my responsibility to take charge of what goes in my mouth and whether I exercise or not. I don't understand how people can continue to smoke, when they know they are one puff away from a heart attack. I'm determined to make better choices and get my weight and health back where it belongs. No major health issues, but my cholesterol is too high and my joints hurt from the excess weight, so I'm working on that. I guess that's why we are on this site. We want to make the changes necessary to take care of ourselves. When I think of how much the groceries cost to eat healthier, I remind myself how much full time nursing care would be if I had a stroke. Puts things in perspective, for sure.

Magna, I used to get a salad at Olive Garden. Good choice right? NOT. Got a list of calories and that salad was extremely high in calories, more than a steak even! I liked how Dolvett showed his team how to make changes to their meals that will lower calories and are still great tasting.
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Kyan » Fri Nov 11, 2011 3:00 am

So did anyone watch this past week? It was interesting having just one person weigh in for the entire team - and it was even more interesting that the coach chose the person! Was anyone else shocked that Bonnie lost 8 pounds?

Anna's team did terrible! I wonder why? I know she knows fitness... but I wonder what she really knows about weight loss.

I thought the cook-off was really fun! Was that meat by the one team MOOING or what?? ha ha Everything else looked pretty tasty!!
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby dene » Fri Nov 11, 2011 5:00 pm

Just watched last night. How crazy was that to have just one person weigh in for the whole team?! What a tough decision for the trainers! No, I couldn't believe Bonnie lost 8 pounds. It was almost funny when Joe was surprised by the vote. I knew before it happened that Vinny was going to vote for him. Vinny was ticked that Joe voted off Jessica last week. That was bottom line. Had nothing to do with strategic play or anything. Good old fashioned revenge. But Joe looked great in his after pics.

Anna has had an uphill battle with her new team. First, they didn't like her, then they decided they did when she kicked their butts, then Ramon got all mad when they voted Jess off and declares he doesn't have a team anymore. So much drama, and Dr. H even told them that stress will affect your weight loss dramatically.

I liked the cooking part. 30 minutes isn't a very long time to prepare a meal, but I thought they did the best they could. I couldn't have eaten the meat that rare (raw) but I think it was just a matter of timing. I loved the scrapbooks the black team got from home. So sweet.
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Kyan » Wed Nov 16, 2011 2:40 pm

So Dene - Bonnie went home! No surprises there! So who is your favorite of the ones who are left?
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby dene » Fri Nov 18, 2011 5:35 pm

Watched last night. Not positive yet, but I like Vinny alot right now. He rarely complains at the work and just seems so determined to do what they tell him. Husband still likes Antone and I'm not opposed to him, but I'm not totally sold on him. I just can't come up with somebody that I'm pulling for 100%. What about you? Anybody pulling ahead in your standings?

Did you hear that Anna won't be back next season? She didn't work out very well. Waiting to see if Dolvett gets the axe, too. Let's face it, nobody is going to be as good at this as Bob. He has the experience. I think they made a mistake by dividing by age, though. All of the older ones is gone except Becky and she was the youngest in the old group. She is a fighter, though, and so is Sunny. It's just hard to know who to pull for.
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Kyan » Fri Nov 18, 2011 6:03 pm

I feel sorry for Anna - but I think the producers of the show just weren't thinking. All along I've felt that excelling at a sport or being fit yourself does not make you an expert on weight loss for EVERYONE ELSE! Bob and Jillian got RESULTS... and I think the "powers that be" were thinking that anyone who is a professional athlete or into fitness could do what they do. I don't agree!

What is Jillian up to these days? I never once saw her show on TV about going into people's homes and helping them for a week - it didn't really interest me that much, to tell you the truth - but I would still have watched it to see what it was about. I wonder if she would consider coming back to the Biggest Loser?

I don't have a favorite at all this season. I don't really like anyone more than anyone else, lol. Maybe someone will stick out in the next week or two!
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby ~Karen~W. » Sat Nov 19, 2011 2:19 am

Hi there. I started watching The Biggest Loser last season and I'm hooked. Jillian has been on "The Doctor's" alot lately. It seems like every time I'm home during the week she's on there. Since I've only been watching for this season and last I haven't seen the show with just her and Bob as the trainers so I can't really compare their training abilities with the new trainers. I did read something about Anna being a good trainer but she's not experienced in training the very overweight person whereas Bob and Jillian are more experienced in that area. I think I would keel over doing some of the workouts these people are doing but it sure is entertaining to watch. I love seeing the transformations.
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Kyan » Wed Nov 23, 2011 4:18 am

Hi Karen!! So glad you came and posted on this thread!!

So did you two watch the show tonight? John made some enemies tonight!! Wow!

Didn't Ramon look awesome have his own personal make-over? Very handsome!

Dene - I think Vinnie might be my favorite now. I also like Becky. As much as I think John is a dipstick, I'm glad that dolvett didn't have to go home this week. I was surprised that two different guys had such crappy weight loss - Ramon and John! That was a shocker!
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby dene » Sat Nov 26, 2011 12:09 am

I didn't get to watch until last night. Yes, John was really playing the game. Antone really told him how it was, didn't he? I still like Vinny alot. Ramon looked great in his after shots. I can hardly believe how good that boy cleaned up. :D

Dolvett has done a good job, I think. But Bob has the experience and he is successful. He has the heart, too. Did you guys watch the special on Wednesday night. I watched it last night after I caught up with BL. I think Abby is remarkable. So glad she was able to find love again.

Looking forward to makeover week! Always alot of fun!
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Re: Who Watches The Biggest Loser??

Postby Randy87 » Wed Nov 30, 2011 5:21 pm

Here is a excellent article about the pros and cons of this show written by Tom Venuto. I hope no-one minds that I posted this, because I think it is a great article!

The Biggest Loser Pros And Cons
By Tom Venuto

The Biggest Loser – a reality show which is essentially a race to see who can lose weight the fastest - is one of the most popular in Television history. I’ve known about The Biggest Loser since it debuted in 2005 because people ask me all the time what I think of the program and of course, the burning question: “How do they lose so much weight?”

Until now, I’ve only seen video clips, browsed forum threads and read news about the show. To give informed answers to questions in the future, I finally wanted to see first-hand what this was really all about. So I sat through the entire two-hour 8th season premiere on September 15th.
Despite its worldwide popularity, The Biggest Loser is controversial and responses to the show are highly polarized. Most viewers seem to be either die-hard loyal fans who defend the show tooth and nail or critics who loathe the program to the point of disgust or outrage.

Most fitness professionals and personal trainers dislike the show, mainly due to what they say is inappropriate training program design and extreme (teetering on dangerous) overtraining.

The mixed reviews for the show aren’t surprising because The Biggest Loser clearly has pros and cons. Having finally watched a full episode, it reinforced my previous belief that the cons outweigh the pros. But in any complete and objective review, it’s only fair to show both sides, so here they are:

BIGGEST LOSER PROS

The Power of Accountability


Accountability is one of the most powerful motivational forces. The producers of The Biggest Loser have set up the conditions and environment with so much accountability, it’s impossible for contestants not to lose weight. This program uses all four levels of accountability which I have discussed in previous blogs: (1) accountability to self, (2) accountability to a partner, (3) accountability to a group, and (4) accountability to the public.

The Spirit of Competition
The most impressive and dramatic body, health and fitness transformations I’ve ever seen have come as a result of competition. You can count me as one of them. I’ve competed in natural bodybuilding more than two dozen times. Why do I still do it after all these years? Because competition is motivating and competition brings out the best performances.

I’m in shape all year round, but I’ve always hit my best shape – PEAK condition - for competition. An organized event with rewards gives people a goal and helps them get moving and give it their best. Although there are downsides to the way the Biggest Loser competition is judged, a healthy competition is a good thing in my book.

The drive of emotions

The producers of The Biggest Loser have done a meticulous job with contestant selection by finding individuals with touching life stories (as contrived as they may be, to encourage made-for TV drama ranging from romance to backstabbing).

It’s Television, so they need storylines and human interest and there’s no shortage of that here. I’m sure many viewers have to break out the Kleenex – it’s a real tear jerker that pulls at the heart strings.

If this program stirs up some emotions in viewers that stimulate them to get up off the couch and start a health and fitness program, then that’s a good thing. People are not inspired to action with logic, they are driven to action with emotion and only later justify their decisions and actions with logic.

Hope and inspiration
Having inspirational role models moves people from “What’s the use; I’ve tried everything and nothing will ever work for me” to, “If they can do it, I can do it.”

I’m tempted to say that these are not the right role models for the public and I do NOT recommend anyone at home try to duplicate what these contestants are doing. However, I can see the value of extreme role models purely for inspiration.

When a 65 year old runs a 135 mile ultramarathon, it makes a 20 or 30-something runner ask, “What’s stopping me from running a paltry 26.2 miles?” If an amputee sprints around a track on prosthetic legs, it makes sedentary able-bodied people, say, “What’s my excuse?” When a 425 pound person loses half his bodyweight, someone with only 40 pounds of excess fat says, “What’s stopping me?”

Seeing those who have already done it forces you to answer, “Nothing was stopping me but my own excuses and limiting beliefs. Now I see it’s not hopeless… it’s possible!”

The reality of hard work

Unlike most weight loss programs which promise results without effort, The Biggest Loser shows the contestants busting their butts. Arguably the biggest loser goes too far, replete with brutal training montages and plenty of crying, screaming, puking and falling down. That’s television for you.

Fitness for life can be enjoyable and even become part of your fun and recreation time. But to think that spectacular and quick results can be achieved without incredibly hard work is naïve. For above average results, it takes an above average effort. For mind blowing results, it takes a mind blowing effort. With effort and hard work, amazing transformations can happen.

BIGGEST LOSER CONS


The Biggest Loser is judged on weight loss, not body composition.

There is no doubt that contestants are losing huge amounts of fat – far above the average, which is usually 1-2 pounds per week. Even obese individuals rarely lose more than 3 pounds of pure fat per week consistently in a real world situation.

The results on the show – often 10 pounds a week with 20-25 not uncommon for first and last week - should not be surprising when you calculate the massive caloric deficit achieved from 4-6 hours of daily training and physical activity, combined with low calorie dieting.

What many fans seem to ignore is that weight loss is not the same as fat loss. Body weight includes muscle, bones, internal organs, water, glycogen and don’t forget the contents of the digestive tract. The weight loss on The Biggest Loser is deceiving. Much of the loss is water. Many contestants may be losing muscle and other lean tissue.

The solution would be simple: judge the competition on body composition, not body weight. Body fat testing is admittedly prone to error, but with the big budget of this show, there’s no reason they couldn’t use gold standard testing methods such as hydrostatic weighing or DEXA scans. They used a Bod Pod in the last episode, but the contest wasn’t judged on the results of those tests (it was more like, “look how fat you are!”)

What’s most alarming to me is that because the show is judged on weight loss, not body composition, contestants are penalized for gaining muscle and actually rewarded for losing muscle. Think about that one for a while.

Rapid weight loss competition encourages physically dangerous practices
The network, the trainers and other supporters of the show say they do not promote or endorse drugs or any unhealthy methods of weight loss. Official statements notwithstanding, the inherent nature of the show promotes dangerous behavior.

Listen to what Biggest Loser season one winner Ryan Benson had to say on his myspace blog:

“I wanted to win so bad that the last ten days before the final weigh-in I didn’t eat one piece of solid food! If you’ve heard of “The Master Cleanse” that’s what I did. Its basically drinking lemonade made with water, lemon juice, maple syrup, and cayenne pepper. The rules of the show said we couldn’t use any weight-loss drugs, well I didn’t take any drugs, I just starved myself! Twenty-four hours before the final weigh-in I stopped putting ANYTHING in my body, liquid or solid, then I started using some old high school wrestling tricks. I wore a rubber suit while jogging on the treadmill, and then spent a lot of time in the steam room. In the final 24 hours I probably dropped 10-13 lbs in just pure water weight. By the time of the final weigh-in I was peeing blood.
Was this healthy? Heck no! My wife wanted to kill me if I didn’t do it to myself first. But I was in a different place, I knew winning the show could put us in a better place financially and I was willing to do some crazy stuff. All this torture I put myself through has had no lasting effects on me (that I know of) and at the time it was sort of a fun adventure for me – but I am sure it reeked havoc on my system.

In the five days after the show was over I gained about 32 lbs. Not from eating, just from getting my system back to normal (mostly re-hydrating myself). So in five days I was back up to 240 – crazy!”

It’s unknown whether any Biggest Loser contestants have taken diuretics (they’re not allowed, but then again Major League baseball players aren’t allowed to take roids either). The greater the rewards and monetary incentives, the greater the willingness to cheat. One thing that’s clear is that even non-drug manipulation of water and electrolyte balance is incredibly dangerous. Would you trade $250,000 for a kidney?

The media often sensationalizes anabolic steroids as a big problem in sports and performance enhancement. What’s been underplayed is another drug used (un-medically supervised) by athletes to shed water and make weight classes – diuretics. It’s not the steroids, but the diuretics, combined with extreme dieting, which have resulted in more confirmed deaths, coronary events, kidney problems and emergency room visits.
Benson wasn’t alone. Kai Hibbard (season 3) answered a question about this on her my space blog:

Q: I’m curious on just how much did you all dehydrate yourselves before the BIG WEIGH IN?

A: I dehydrated off 19 pounds in the last two weeks before the BIG weigh in. I stopped eating solid food after eating only protein and asparagus (a diuretic) then I had two colonics and spent the night before the weigh in and out of a sauna. there really was no “diet” the day of the weigh in, we weigh in as dehydrated as possible on empty stomachs after 2 hour workouts in the morning.
As with Benson, Hibbard’s final week weight came flying back:

“I actually put on about 31 pounds in two weeks. After my body had a chance to stabilize I spent all last year hovering between 159 and 175, I fight everyday to find some stability.”

The Biggest Loser pushes overtraining to the point of high injury risk
On the first season 8 episode, just minutes after getting off the bus, contestants faced the first workout “challenge.” The group of morbidly obese contestants (weighing up to 460 pounds), were instructed to take a 1 mile run down the beach. It was NOT a go at your own pace type of thing, it was a RACE with a prize for the winner.

One of them collapsed just short of the finish line, at first looking dehydrated and fatigued and then progressing into looking seriously ill, incoherent and unconscious. She was flown by medivac chopper to the hospital. The hospitalization was weaved into the drama of the episode, but alarmingly trivialized.

It was not the first time. Contestants from previous seasons have also been admitted to the hospital and one suffered a stress fracture.

Later during the workout, contestants were shown climbing a Jacob’s ladder, pushing sleds, doing intense cardio and calisthenics, lifting weights and performing plyometrics. These did not look like beginner-level workouts and the form on some of the exercises was sloppy enough to make a professional strength and conditioning coach cringe.

Before the show (off camera), the contestants took a stress test to screen out people who might be at risk for a heart attack, and no doubt, they all signed airtight liability releases. There was also a disclaimer on the screen for the viewing audience. But aside from that, there seemed to be a disturbing absence of proper risk warnings in light of the physical tasks they were asked to perform.

There was also no mention that 4-6 hours of training per day for weight loss is gross overtraining, almost certain to bring overuse injuries, and something that no one at home should EVER try to emulate, even if they could.

The Biggest Loser has no relevance to real world situations
The producers of The Biggest Loser have created the perfect environment for success. Contestants have personal trainers, nutritionists, group support, accountability, a national audience, and the biggest carrot imaginable – a prize of $250,000 and a potential platform to launch a motivational speaking or fitness career.

The participants move out of their homes and onto The Biggest Loser “Ranch” where they have no job other than losing weight. There are no kids to worry about, no work, no social obligations, no chores, nothing – just working out and dieting.

This is a totally artificial and controlled environment with no relevance to the average person. In the real world, people who work out 4-6 hours a day for weight loss are not called inspirational and dedicated, they are called obsessive-compulsive or exercise anorexics.

Shouldn’t contestants (and viewers) be taught to exercise in a way that fits into a normal person’s daily life, between work, family and social obligations? Achieving health and fitness as part of total life balance is probably one of the biggest missing pieces in the obesity crisis, yet you won’t find solutions for that challenge on The Biggest Loser.

The Biggest Loser trainers are walking a fine line between tough love and abuse
I’ve listened to an interview or two with Biggest Loser trainer Jillian Michaels and she was motivating, informative and seemed like a good spokesperson for fitness. That’s why I was shocked by her yelling profanities in the face of the contestants. She was dropping F-bomb after F-bomb.

I believe strongly that a good coach sometimes has to get in a client’s face and be very tough. People are motivated by different styles of leadership and coaching, but in general, most people need to be pushed, not coddled, out of their comfort zones and they will always perform beyond what they believed they could accomplish when they are put under pressure.

Read the biographies of some of the great coaches like Vince Lombardi. Read about the great military leaders like General Patton. You’ll see they were not soft on their players or troops. It was tough love. It was necessary for victory. It was not however, disrespectful, rude, humiliating or unprofessional (when Patton crossed the line, he was reprimanded… watch the movie, it’s a classic).

Then again, this was television and Jillian makes for good TV, I‘ll give you that.

On The Biggest Loser, normal rates of weight loss are penalized and frowned on as failure

One of my first exposures to this show was a video clip of the weigh ins, which I saw a couple years ago. A blue team member lost 20 pounds in one week. Mouths were open, gasps were heard, jaws were hitting the floor, followed by congratulations and applause.
When the other blue teammate stepped on the scale and registered “only” an 8 pound loss, the congratulations quickly faded, heads were shaking, facial expressions turned to contempt and blue team member number two sulked off in shame because it appeared as if she did something horribly wrong and that only one member of the team pulled her weight .

When an 8 pound weight loss is seen as a failure, imagine what viewers at home will think about a perfectly normal 1-2 pound weekly weight loss.

The Biggest Loser encourages unrealistic weight loss expectations
Surely any clear-thinking person realizes The Biggest Loser is a contest and at home they are NOT going to drop 25 pounds their first week and 8-10 pounds every week after that. However, more and more people are posting on forums online and asking their trainers why they “only” lost 3-5 pounds their first week or why they can’t lose more than 2 pounds per week.

When people get discouraged with perfectly reasonable weight loss, it makes our job as fitness professionals and health educators much harder. This is a big reason why most trainers hate this show.

Do you know how difficult it is to persuade a Biggest Loser fan that 3 pounds per week is exceptionally good fat loss? A 3 pound weekly weight loss of pure fat is outstanding and above average, but it’s more difficult than ever today to get people to accept slow and steady weight loss as a best practice for healthy, maintainable results.

Is it fair to pin the blame on one reality TV show? Well, not entirely. We can pin blame on a combination of human nature and the approach of the weight loss industry at large, including diet program, pill and supplement advertising, especially those which show “results not typical” (or even phony) before and after pictures. But reality TV courtesy of The Biggest Loser is certainly one of the culprits.

The Biggest Loser teaches you absolutely nothing about setting realistic goals. It actually encourages the opposite.

The Biggest Loser does not teach real-world lifestyle strategies
I haven’t watched enough of the show to assess whether the participants are given any kind of nutrition, exercise and health education that they can take home with them and make a part of their lifestyles for the long term.

Even if the contestants get psychological counseling, fitness education, motivational tools and time with dieticians - off camera or on - the structure of the competition leads me to think it is all for naught.

Participants and viewers are not learning about nutrition and training as a lifestyle, because the inherent nature of the show only teaches them how to crash diet, crash exercise and achieve short-term weight loss.

In particular, where is the emphasis on nutrition? I guess there’s not much time to film nutrition education when 45 minutes of the show is spent on the high drama of the weigh-in and elimination round.

The Biggest Loser doesn’t focus on lifelong maintenance
Weight loss is easy. Whether you lose 1-2 pounds a week or 10 pounds a week, either way, maintenance is going to be the true challenge.

A study from Oxford showed that 80% of weight losers will gain all the weight back within 3-5 years. A report from the National Weight Control Registry suggested that this relapse rate could be as high as 95%.

It’s not a foregone conclusion that you’ll regain weight after a large and or rapid weight loss. Some can keep it off. Most won’t, and if you lose weight rapidly, the odds are against you. Without a plan for maintenance, the odds are close to nil.

Where is the focus in The Biggest Loser on teaching contestants maintenance strategies for keeping the weight off after they get back into the real world?

“The Biggest Loser”: Much worse than a clever name

I have one final con; more of a personal pet peeve, really. I despise the name of the show. No one wants to be a loser. Anyone who sets a goal and achieves it is a winner, but in this show, if you win, you’re a loser.

The words “lose” and “loser” should be stricken from your vocabulary. Release, shed, discard, incinerate or burn the fat, but don’t lose it and for your own sake, please don’t call yourself a loser.

“But it’s just semantics, Tom.” Precisely, and the hidden meanings of words, names and labels carry great power. They can shape a person’s identity, affect self-esteem and influence behavior.

Conclusion


As a show so widely broadcast and publicized, which spotlights the worldwide obesity problem and encourages people to do something about it, The Biggest Loser could have been something great. But it falls short in many areas. There are unredeemable flaws weaved into the very fabric of the show.
The trainers and physicians get on their soapboxes and tell the contestants how sick they are. But is this show really about health? Depending on how you approach it, getting skinny doesn’t always mean getting healthy – physically or psychologically.

Not only do the cons outweigh the pros, if you go back and look at my list of positive qualities in the show, you can find every one of them somewhere else in a more healthy context. It’s important to have role models, but this show is no model for physically and emotionally healthy weight loss.

The Biggest Loser is just Television, where the bottom line is ratings and sponsors. If you can, draw some inspiration from the show, but not your education. If you watch, then please recognize this show for what it is – entertainment; show business. Nothing more. nothing less.

About Tom Venuto

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Tom Venuto is a lifetime natural (steroid-free) bodybuilder, freelance writer and author of Burn The Fat, Feed The Muscle (e-book) and the #1 Amazon best-seller, The Body Fat Solution (Avery/Penguin, hardcover). Tom’s articles are featured on hundreds of websites worldwide and he has been featured in IRONMAN, Australian IRONMAN, Natural Bodybuilding, Muscular Development, Men’s Fitness, Men’s Exercise as well as on dozens of radio shows including Martha Stewart healthy living (Sirius), ESPN-1250 and WCBS. Tom is also the founder and CEO of the premier fat loss support community, the Burn The Fat Inner Circle
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