ChefAshley
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Did anyone else see the show Ruby on the style network tonight?? I caught the last 15 minutes or so and think its going to be a good show.
Style Network's 'Ruby' reveals more flash than form
By Robert Lloyd
HOLLYWOOD—The Style Network is not the first place you would think to look for a reality series about a 500-pound woman. But here is "Ruby" (7 p.m., Sunday), which joins the home of "Fashion Police," "Dress My Nest" and "How Do I Look?".
Ruby Gettinger lives in the photogenic city of Savannah, Ga.; she is pretty and lively and cannot cross her legs or paint her toenails. She dreams of taking a bubble bath, riding a horse, sitting on someone's lap. She has weighed as much as 700 pounds, which does not sound possible, and looks back nostalgically at 350. She is surrounded by people who love her but cannot resist allowing her the Southern cooking she craves and which is killing her. Sometimes they are the ones to cook it.
"You want to help her," says childhood friend and roommate Jeff, "but you always want her to be happy."
"I'm always taking the easy road, the quick fix," admits Ruby.
As we meet her, she is about to get a life-or-death sentence from her doctor—who describes her as "a metabolic time bomb"—and decides to seriously tackle her weight. On one level, we are here to see whether Ruby can get down to the 150 pounds it's suggested her frame is made to hold. It's the same thing that propels "The Biggest Loser" and other weight-loss shows—the unlocking of the princess from her prison.
"It's not a childhood dream that I dream: Oh, let me be the biggest woman in the whole wide world," she says.
At the same time, we are here to get to know Ruby better, as she gets to know herself better. Indeed, the second episode has relatively little to do with her weight-loss program and much to do with the return of an old, buff boyfriend. (Weighing 500 pounds is an impediment to many things, but it does not stop her from riding on the back of a Harley-Davidson.)
She is good-humored and good company, although one would guess that she's less well-adjusted than she seems, and a visit to a psychiatrist hints at yet-to-be-explored repressed childhood trauma. Similarly, when Ruby's nephew Jim says he lives with his aunt because his parents "got a cat" to which he's allergic, I mean, one would have to think there's more to that story.
It's not the most compelling reality show ever—apart from the old boyfriend, whom she at least claims to be over, there is relatively little personal drama surrounding Ruby. But it's a sweet portrait of supportive friendship and embodies, in a way that's hard to miss, struggles we all have—and there is nothing bad to say about that.
What's the point behind the show?

See, this is what drives me nuts about these shows. All of these people simply do not get it- and seem to not get it almost intentionally. I am sorry, 99 times out of 100 if you are 450 lbs it is not because of any reason other than you eat too damn much and do not exercise. Bottom line. When I was huge I knew damn well why I was.There was something similar on over here a while back, about a 450 lbs woman....who claimed that she wasn't over eating, and was all teary about how she is trying everything and just can't lose weight. Her son was caring for her, even wiping her butt and giving her baths, and he was over 350 lbs as well. She claimed it was all horrible, and she wanted to change, and wanted help, yadda, yadda....
After about 15 minutes they showed her day, and it was revealed that her breakfast consisted of about 8 or 9 Mars Bars and a full bottle of coke, followed by eating anything under the sun, and stuffing her son as well, only to follow it up with a tearful 'I don't know why I can't lose weight' tirade. At that point I was screaming at the telly, and after a heart felt 'If you wanna lose weight, stop eating like a pig you stupid cow!', I turned the tele off. Shows like that are stupid, and if they expect me to feel sorry for any of them, that won't happen. I was nearly 400 lbs myself, and I know that if you want to lose weight, and are willing to make changes and work hard for it, you'll lose it. Simple as that. No point in sitting here and watching shows in which somebody like that is made ut as the poor victim of bad circumstances, and then get them a free gastric bypass operation. That just makes me wanna hurl stuff at the tele!![]()
That all being said- and I agree with a portion of it- I am still drawn to the shows on discovery health the same way that people stop to look at a car wreck on the highway. I am honestly amazed sometimes by the ignorance of some people. They do nto seem to get it. The hypocritical part of this was that I would sit and watch these shows while eating a 5 double cheesburgers....
I am n ot on TV because honestly the trials and tribulations of an achingly average fat man is just not that interesting.And why are they on tele, and I am not, even though I am doing much better than they are in the weight loss department??? Not fair! *pout*
they kinda made it all out to seem like Ruby was embracing being over weight but should still lose weight, yanno? Kinda like "let's hand everything to her, she can lose weight later" and thats what bothers me.
I had to watch it. Ruby is a beautiful woman with a lovable personality... I hope she can get down to a weight that allows her to enjoy all of those things that she can't enjoy now.
She brings her own food to restuarants?but most of the time she brings her healthy meals to the restraunts while her friends order their regular meals.
She brings her own food to restuarants?
:eyeroll:
why not learn how to eat...
I agree that watching an obese person grumble about being heavy and not actually doing anything about it seems pointless. But, there's something about Ruby that makes me cheer for her. I do not doubt that she has put herself in this condition, but I can relate to her in some ways....Knowing what the right thing to do is, but not doing it in actuality. We all know we shouldn't eat cake and cookies, but we still do, even if we want to stop. Obviously her life is to the extreme, however I feel for her. If Ruby can overcome her obstacles, I have no excuse.