KaraCooks
New member
This article just reinforces my every feeling about the show.
Some selected quotes:
I hate that this show "inspires" people - because I truly believe that what it does it set up totally unrealistic goals and beliefs about weight loss.
Some selected quotes:
On camera, Zwierstra seemed giddy and brash, interrupting host Caroline Rhea, hollering at her friends in the audience, tipsy on her 3-inch heels. Secretly, she was woozy, having dehydrated herself by avoiding liquids, baking in a sauna and fasting for days to skim off those last few pounds.
Less attention was paid to diet, though there were plenty of product placements. Like the day they did a segment on drinking milk as part of a weight-loss plan
"That was sponsored by the dairy board," she said. "The minute the cameras shut off, my trainer was like, 'Spit it out.' "
The philosophy of the show -- to radically change diets and exercise patterns of obese people -- seemed to have a hidden message about her character, Zwierstra said. It seemed to say that weakness made people fat. If they just had discipline, if they weren't lazy, they could be thin.
Toward the end of the show, with her final weigh-in looming, the desire to be thinner swallowed her. She cut back her eating even more: lettuce, tuna and turkey burgers. Sometimes after she ate, she'd make herself throw up.
Shin splints crippled her, but she stuck to her gym routine.
Contestants are allowed "free days," when they can take a break and eat what they want. Zwierstra avoided them until one day when she decided to have a cookie, a Pepperidge Farm Snickerdoodle. Soon she'd eaten the whole bag, washed down with a quart of milk.
So she swallowed a box of Ex-Lax.
Her hair thinned. Jacob started hiding the scale.
I hate that this show "inspires" people - because I truly believe that what it does it set up totally unrealistic goals and beliefs about weight loss.