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Oprah REALLY loves bread!
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@PaleoInScotland I feel similarly. This WOE really does feel different and sustainable.0
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Oprah has made many wise decisions. That's why she's richer than Queen Elizabeth. But one of her really BAD choices was to write a book some years ago about how she and her personal trainer Bob Greene had once and for all times solved her weight issues. Complete with a slew of photographs, an even worse decision than writing the book in the first place.
I've had my own weight issues for a long time but at least no one can whip out a hardback book and shove it in my face.0 -
daylitemag wrote: »Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »What's surprising to me isn't that she loves her bread (it's yummy) it's that she's such a zealot about a new diet after all these years and all the diets she's been on. Even now, she's sure THIS is the one.
Don't we all think "this is the one!?" I know I do, even though the history of my entire life has proven otherwise. We have to have hope and be optimistic. However, in Oprah's case I'm pretty sure it's all about the Benjamins. I seriously doubt that someone with her money needs or would ever use WW. She has a private chef, at least one trainer and a medical team all on her permanent staff. Which now that I think of it really says something about how hard it is to lose and keep off the weight. I mean, if someone with that much professional support (and who lives under constant media scrutiny) can't do it then.......
I don't think it's about the money. She doesn't need money. She is probably thinking (again): if I do it in the public eye, the public will hold me accountable.
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I saw this on reddit a few days ago. I have to wonder if there really are couples that argue over the last piece of bread. I know I've seen couples fight over one of them smoking the last cigarette, so I don't doubt it!
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Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »What's surprising to me isn't that she loves her bread (it's yummy) it's that she's such a zealot about a new diet after all these years and all the diets she's been on. Even now, she's sure THIS is the one.
Totally.0 -
Yup, she owns a big stake in WW now: http://www.forbes.com/sites/laurengensler/2015/10/19/weight-watchers-oprah-winfrey/#56f71567b3bf
OCT 19, 2015
Oprah Pays $43 Million For Weight Watchers Stake, Stock Spikes
Shares of Weight Watchers were soaring on Monday after billionaire media mogul Oprah Winfrey announced she has taken a 10% stake in the weight loss company.
Winfrey will spend $43 million on the investment, according to a regulatory filing, buying 6.4 million newly-issued shares at $6.79 apiece. Winfrey will also receive options to acquire an additional 5% stake.
“Weight Watchers has given me the tools to begin to make the lasting shift that I and so many of us who are struggling with weight have longed for,” said Winfrey, a member, in a statement. “I believe in the program so much I decided to invest in the company and partner in its evolution.”
Winfrey will also join the board of directors and act as an adviser for the company.
Shares of Weight Watchers soared 92%, or $6.27 per share, on the news.
“Through our conversations, it became clear that there is tremendous alignment between Oprah’s intention and our mission,” said Weight Watchers CEO Jim Chambers in a statement. Chambers noted that the company hopes to become more about leading a happy, healthy life rather than just losing weight, and Winfrey should be of help toward that end.
... the rest of the story0 -
I tried WW a few years ago. I did the online plan for about 6 months. I lost NOTHING. They were doing the program where many vegetables and fruits were 0 points, which doesn't really make sense to me. I've had much better success counting calories with MFP, and it's free!
I've done WW about 4 different times for 4-6 months each time, and NEVER lost more then 3 lbs...and that would yo-yo up and down during the entire time. I see these people who attend the meetings and they are so gung-ho with buying the premade foods and starving themselves (seriously, I had friends who wouldn't eat anything and only drink 8 glasses of water, the two days before the weigh in), but they did not learn anything of value for their body and they never maintained weight loss.
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daylitemag wrote: »Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »What's surprising to me isn't that she loves her bread (it's yummy) it's that she's such a zealot about a new diet after all these years and all the diets she's been on. Even now, she's sure THIS is the one.
Don't we all think "this is the one!?"
Unfortunately, no.
I'm not here by choice, and there are several elements of this diet that make it much harder for me than the one on which I maintained weight loss for around 5 years (until my daughter was diagnosed with a chronic, life-threatening illness, my spouse was diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment consistent with early stage alzheimers, my client lost our major client, etc.)
I have no doubt that I will reach my goal, and maintain it for several months. For me, that is the easy part. I'm just hoping that I will be able to keep medical necessity (diabetes) in the forefront of my mind, once I the daily drag of counting not only calories but carbs wears me out and I start skipping the tracking. (Neither the counting nor the tracking were required on the most successful change in diet I've undertaken.)0 -
My neighbor has done ww, jenny craig and never lost more than a 15lbs or so and then she gains then right back. She's already thin, by my standards, but she has some "grandmotherly fluff" to her. Now she's on this new kick where she pays $200 a month to have a body fat scan done, then a personal trainer does a workout plan for her for the next month based on her body fat composition and where she is holding wait and a dietitian makes a special diet for her each month. Last month she was eating nothing but boiled chicken with no seasoning, brown rice, broccoli and Cheerios's with watered down further skim milk. Yuck. I'll take KETO any day... and the joy of watching her grimace when I tell her i'm down almost 10 pounds eating butter in a couple weeks and she's struggling to lose 3 pounds a month.0
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Sunny_Bunny_ wrote: »I saw this on reddit a few days ago. I have to wonder if there really are couples that argue over the last piece of bread. I know I've seen couples fight over one of them smoking the last cigarette, so I don't doubt it!
My father and I have always "fought" (playfully, sometimes sneakily) over the end pieces of a loaf of crusty French or Italian bread. He's the one who taught me to love them, and then I started stealing them from him. It's okay, he loves me. I'm a Daddy's girl.0 -
I agree, I too think this is the way of eating for me. But I know LC is the one, as it is the only time in my 53 year old life I have stuck to something this long (7months) and lost more than 10lbs - now 75lb this morning. Every time I started a diet I thought what would be different that time was my will power. It is not will power on its own, the style of food has a huge effect. The food will then help support my health and mental well being and give me the stamina. Not being hungry also makes a huge difference to me.0
This discussion has been closed.