Biggest Loser Finale
Replies
-
Another perspective
What if ...just what if she decided to go home and starve only to win the game with plans to go back to her regular workout and eating afterwards?? It is a monetary incentive after all. Many are blaming the show, but she did leave the ranch at a healthy weight and then the trainers don't see them again until the finale.
I didn't watch this season and there was the issue with Jillian giving her team caffeine pills.
The show is not reality and the contestants open themselves up to so much criticism including on board like these. We must remember it is a game and we are not Rachel.0 -
Um… I'm a 45 year old mother… :huh:
0 -
We can cast our judgements and thoughts forever, but the fact of the matter is that the Biggest Loser Contenstants are also on their own personal journeys. Too big, too thin, it doesn't matter. I understand when you are on a show such as BL, you are subject to public scrutiny, but I think we on MFP, of all people should know that each journey is individual and I am sad that this woman is being criticized so fervently. Whether or not I think she is healthy, I cannot begin to understand what she is going through because I am not her. I do know that her success and the success of the other contestants is inspiring. I may not want to look like her, but I am not her, and neither are any of us. :-)
Have a great day!
Amen!0 -
I just finished watching the show tonight and the look on Jillian's face was priceless! :noway: I personally feel like Rachel is too thin now...She just looks unhealthy. I'll take a curvy/fit body over a skinny one anyday!0
-
I don't think her body looks too bad, but her face looks awful. It looks like she's aged 20 years. My co-worker who has an ED thinks Rachel looks pretty. Go figure.0
-
I think its not about how she looks, it is how she lost the weight. She ate only 1600 calories a day and worked out 4 times a day. That is excessive. She mentioned she starting working part time to fit her exercise routine. She also talks about taking "control". People with eating disorders use food whether it is too much or too little as a way gain control. Text book warning signs. I honestly do not think it had to do with the money. I think she lost all this weight and kept going. Since there was no supervision, she took matters into her own hands. She is unhealthy and TBL should be concerned. She looks like Karen Carpenter, not someone who is healthy. Her trainer even came out with statement stating her "journey" to get healthy is not complete. They know she needs help.0
-
Personally if they paid ME $250,000 it would not be enough to suffer through one episode of Biggest Loser but it's not just the Biggest Loser or even television. Seen any models lately? They carry zero body fat because they are bulimic, anorexic or drugged. I'm not trying to "skinny shame" but I don't like what the media says to us and our children (especially girls). Rachel and TBL are just symptoms of a larger problem.
Ever watched an old movie? Like a black and white silent film? The women in those movies have realistic bodies and looks.
Don't get me wrong, I support those (like me!) who are overweight and want to be thinner, I just think the emphasis should be on "healthier" not "thinner."0 -
I guess Bob Harper did an interview with Rachel Ray that will air February 13th. In it he says he was "stunned" by Rachel's weight loss and emphasizes that he did not have contact with Rachel after she left the ranch.
http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/media/biggest-loser-trainer-bob-harper-stunned-when-he-saw-skeletal-winner/21646190 -
You know what's truly funny?
Biggest Loser has been promoting unsafe, unrealistic, extreme weigh loss tactics all along, but no one seemed to care until someone started LOOKING unhealthy.
No one gave a s^hit about all the vomiting because of physical exhaustion, the incredibly low calorie diets, etc. That chick who won did it the same way everyone else did, she just did it a little bit longer.
I am just saying, no one took offense to her drastic methods until the results were showing on her body.
this x1000
ultimately it is a show where skinny people get to torture fat people all in the name of getting skinny and the world watches it for amusement. She took the show to its natural conclusion and when confronted by the result of their preaching the trainers look horrified as if it's never occurred to them. Also realistically she looks like most television and Hollywood stars in terms of weight, but I suppose with Angelina Jolie people kid themselves and say 'she must be one of those lucky ones that never gains a pound'. Is it healthy? No, but in a few years time the woman will write a book about 'How Biggest Loser ruined my life' and she'll sell millions.0 -
I actually don't think her body looks too bad but her face looks terrible. She looks like she aged 20 years.0
-
I just think she looked malnourished and way older than 24 - sad that the network hasn't really made any comments and the trainers are kind of skating around the subject.0
-
I have not watched the show since I cancelled my dvr. Too expensive right now. I love the show.0
-
I actually don't think her body looks too bad but her face looks terrible. She looks like she aged 20 years.0
-
Seriously? Someone is 50-100 pounds overweight and no one bats an eye, because this is America where everyone is overweight. But you get 1 point below a normal BMI and everyone loses their minds.
You can't please them when you're obese and you can't please them when you're too skinny.
^^^^^^
Yep :grumble:
^^^^^ x 2.
Thanks for making it easy.0 -
I thought she was 40 >_>
In one article I read she admits to exercising four times a day...wtf.0 -
Seriously? Someone is 50-100 pounds overweight and no one bats an eye, because this is America where everyone is overweight. But you get 1 point below a normal BMI and everyone loses their minds.
You can't please them when you're obese and you can't please them when you're too skinny.
^^^^^^
Yep :grumble:
^^^^^ x 2.
Thanks for making it easy.
You know, I don't think her body looks too bad. It just looks thin which is okay to me. But what the heck happened to her face? She looks 20 years older. Does that happen as a result of the stress from losing too quickly?0 -
The winner went from being 150% overweight to *possibly* being 10% underweight with vastly improved fitness levels. That is a massive improvement in health, and a bloody impressive achievement.
A little fine tuning and she'll be golden, really don't understand where all the manufactured outrage is coming from.0 -
She just looked grey, and about ten years older at that. I guess she should have gone to Specsavers?0
-
I read somewhere that behind the scenes she lost so much because she really wanted to win the contest but was going to try to be at a healthier weight afterwards. I don't know if it's true or not but when you offer a large cash prize and put people on a TV show where they are losing weight in a competition within a short period of time, it's going to put people under enormous pressure to lose as much weight as possible in a limited span of time -- so it's hardly surprising that results like this have happened. People have come forward and spoken up about these shows (not just these but shows like Extreme Makeover, Weight Loss Edition)
http://fatman2fitman.tumblr.com/post/40213968513/the-truth-about-the-biggest-loser
http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/former-biggest-loser-contestant-andrew-cosi-costello-reveals-the-truth-about-the-weight-loss-show/story-e6frfmq9-1226820498768
http://blackgirlsguidetoweightloss.com/health-on-the-small-screen/former-extreme-makeover-weight-loss-edition-cast-member-blows-whistle-on-shows-practices/
Weight loss isn't a game nor should it be used as a subject for entertaining an audience. These shows need to go.0 -
Rachel looked anorexic not healthy.0
-
The winner went from being 150% overweight to *possibly* being 10% underweight with vastly improved fitness levels. That is a massive improvement in health, and a bloody impressive achievement.
A little fine tuning and she'll be golden, really don't understand where all the manufactured outrage is coming from.
Manufactured rage. She looks like she is in her 40's not 20's. Her face looks way too thin to me. It was when I saw her face, and then found out her age that I was like...oooh, ok I get why people are saying this.0 -
:drinker: I agree with you!0
-
The winner went from being 150% overweight to *possibly* being 10% underweight with vastly improved fitness levels. That is a massive improvement in health, and a bloody impressive achievement.
A little fine tuning and she'll be golden, really don't understand where all the manufactured outrage is coming from.
Manufactured rage. She looks like she is in her 40's not 20's. Her face looks way too thin to me. It was when I saw her face, and then found out her age that I was like...oooh, ok I get why people are saying this.
Yeah I agree. Her face is what shocked me. Her body is actually not that bad and I thought she looked good until I saw her face...her body just looks slim to me which is not such a bad thing and was an amazing transformation. So if her body is ok, why did she age so much in the face? Is it the stress on her body from rapid weight loss? Or is that just what happens to the skin after a significant loss?0 -
Delete.0
-
You know what's truly funny?
Biggest Loser has been promoting unsafe, unrealistic, extreme weigh loss tactics all along, but no one seemed to care until someone started LOOKING unhealthy.
No one gave a s^hit about all the vomiting because of physical exhaustion, the incredibly low calorie diets, etc. That chick who won did it the same way everyone else did, she just did it a little bit longer.
I am just saying, no one took offense to her drastic methods until the results were showing on her body.
this x1000
ultimately it is a show where skinny people get to torture fat people all in the name of getting skinny and the world watches it for amusement. She took the show to its natural conclusion and when confronted by the result of their preaching the trainers look horrified as if it's never occurred to them. Also realistically she looks like most television and Hollywood stars in terms of weight, but I suppose with Angelina Jolie people kid themselves and say 'she must be one of those lucky ones that never gains a pound'. Is it healthy? No, but in a few years time the woman will write a book about 'How Biggest Loser ruined my life' and she'll sell millions.0 -
Our panel of obesity experts on The Biggest Loser’s extreme regimen: ‘Incredibly unhealthy’ and ‘ridiculous’
http://life.nationalpost.com/2014/02/07/our-panel-of-obesity-experts-on-the-biggest-losers-extreme-regimen-incredibly-unhealthy-and-ridiculous/
We asked a few Canadian doctors about what they thought about the show’s rapid weight loss regimen, as well as what the surrounding weight criticism could mean for contestants.
Jaclyn Pritchard, Weight and Lifestyle Management Program at the Cleveland Clinic:
“The Biggest Loser promotes incredibly unhealthy weight loss practices to obtain the kinds of shocking weight loss that will keep participants in the game. This type of fast weight loss is both incredibly unhealthy and unsustainable. When you lose weight rapidly, you lose muscle weight, which drops your metabolism (meaning you burn fewer calories). The participants are put on such low calorie diets that they cant help but lose muscle weight, affecting their metabolism. When they reach their weight loss goal their metabolic rate is so affected that they have to continue eating lower calorie to maintain their weight — this is no way to live or need to eat to maintain your weight. The Biggest Loser provides participants with a completely nonsensical approach to weight loss leaving the odds of weight maintenance against them.”
“The impact [of negative comments after weight loss] could be huge … likely because we as a society have a hard time understanding that heavier people can and do have eating disorders. The Biggest Loser does not address the food behaviours or life obstacles that lead to obesity that many of the participants have. So if these issues are not addressed, the participant is left in a skinny body but with the same food challenges and body image issues as in their previous fat body.”
Arya M. Sharma, professor of Medicine Chair for Obesity, Research & Management at the University of Alberta:
“The very premise of this show is so ridiculous, you don’t know where to begin talking about all that is wrong about it. Not only is it overly simplistic to equate body weight with health (or losing weight with getting healthier), but the whole notion of engaging in ridiculous amounts of punitive physical abuse whilst on a starvation diet as an even remotely sustainable approach to improving your health, raises ethical questions on so many levels. The health risks of rapid weight loss are well described ranging from loss of muscle mass to electrolyte imbalances, kidney failure, and even sudden cardiac death.
“The skinnyness cult (not least through photoshopped images in the media and celebrity pop culture) does enough to damage the self-esteem of even the healthiest woman (or man) — it is hard to imagine what this criticism will do to this contestant.”
Yoni Freedhoff, assistant professor at the Department of Family Medicine, University of Ottawa. Medical director at the Bariatric Medical Institute:
“Losing weight ultra-rapidly necessitates dramatic, and possibly traumatic, degrees of both under-eating and over-exercising. No doubt there are risks to the body with overly rapid losses (including disproportionate muscle loss and metabolic slowing), but more important for viewers and participants to know, if the behaviours utilized for weight loss aren’t themselves sustained, weight regain is inevitable.”
“In terms of impacts on body image for the winner, it’s impossible to speculate, though the reason I’ve never allowed a television program to follow any of my patients (despite many requests over the years), is that I would definitely expect the pressure of the public eye to make the already difficult challenge of maintaining a lifestyle change that much more stressful.”
Sonja Wicklum, medical doctor, Calgary Weight Management Centre:
“This would be considered an unhealthy amount of weight loss for this period of time. It is also worth pointing out that, at 105 pounds, she has also crossed into the ‘underweight category’. “
“The greatest concern with this amount of loss over such a short period of time is the loss of FFM (fat free mass). FFM is made up of muscle, organ tissue, skin and bone. Although all components are important, it is particularly the loss of too much lean muscle that is worrisome. There is an association between declining health in adults with significant loss of FFM — problems can include impaired immunity, increase risk of infection, increase risk of fracture, increased overall risk of mortality, and most importantly for her — impaired ability to sustain the weight loss. Without knowing her body composition it is impossible to know exactly how great her loss of FFM has been, but with this amount of total weight loss we can be certain it is too high.”
“It is OK to lose some weight quickly, but then the rest should be lost much slower, to maintain metabolic health and maximize the chance of long-term success. All this being said, I would not want this woman to feel bad or to be criticized personally. She will need to adapt to her new body and hopefully she will receive good support over the next couple of years to help her build back her lean muscle mass, while maintaining a healthy diet and exercise regime and a healthy body image.”
Jennifer French, registered psychologist, Calgary Weight Management Centre.
“Having others vigilant of her body is likely to contribute to being even more self-conscious of appearance than before. Attention, even apparently positive, about someone’s image may contribute to the thoughts ‘I need to the keep this up,’ or ‘I am not okay no matter what I do.’ These thoughts and the pressure to change may be a contributing factors to why weight is regained. The focus on restrictive eating, sets in motion a cycle of thoughts such as ‘I cannot have that’ and at some point, the person gives in, which often leads to a binge. The binge may be evidence in ones’s mind that she is out of control and will fall back into old habits, leading to shame, guilt, and feelings of failure. The psychological consequences are that she feels locked into rigid rules about food and how her body looks and this keeps the cycle going. Chronic self-criticism and negative body image make it difficult to make consistently healthy choices that are required for good self-care that lead to weight management.”0 -
Um… I'm a 45 year old mother… :huh:
I'm over 40 as well, and don't look as "old" and haggard as she does now, nor do any of my 40+ year old friends/family.0 -
Here ya go. #MyTake Friend me afterward if you want. Haters..... well No time for them! I like the fact that ALL the comments in this called it well thought and balanced. //Lee
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/commander38/view/and-the-biggest-loser-is-6263610 -
There is nothing wrong with being 40. I'm 35. I look young for my age (still get carded because they say I look 18), that is my goal. When I was in my 20's people thought I was a young teenager, so maybe my perception is biased. Also, last night I had a glass of wine and maybe lost my filter. I do not want to offend anyone. Also I weigh 102, so I am not against being slim.0
-
I have always been a big fan of the biggest loser. It has helped inspire me many times along my journey with weight loss. I have always questioned the methods they use to allow the contestants to loose that much weight so quickly, but I guess I felt comforted that at least they were under doctor supervision the entire time, and presumably weren't doing anything that could seriously effect their health negatively, after all, isn't loosing weight the end goal? But when I saw Rachel, it kinda broke my heart a little. It seems to me from the comments that she has made thus far, that she is totally unaware or reluctant to admit that she might have lost just a little too much weight. I think she wanted to win so badly that even when she saw a healthy number on the scale, she felt like she had to keep going, and that is what I think people are upset about, that a weight loss competition and the promise of 250,000 dollars could push someone to diet themselves down to a weight that that extremely low.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 176K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.6K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions