Carne Seca
Well-Known Member
Shut up before I french kiss you.Ignorance.... Astounding.... yada yada....
Shut up before I french kiss you.Ignorance.... Astounding.... yada yada....
Lol, where did you find that?Bet they're heading to Mcdonalds.
You'll have to go thru April first.... lolShut up before I french kiss you.
Google is awesome, and as far as denying fast food, I don't think children should eat it on the regular.Lol, where did you find that?
Would it be going to far to deny fat people from eating fast food?
She would skin me alive.You'll have to go thru April first.... lol
No one should eat that shit.....and as far as denying fast food, I don't think children should eat it on the regular.
Sorry. I didn't see this earlier.What does the research say about the people on the biggest losers, losing all the weight? Are they cured or just eating right and exerising?
Even the trainers admit to a 50-60% failure rate. It's actually much higher. More like 80%. If you google it, you'll find story after story of contestants not only gaining the weight back but some are heavier than they were before.The New York Times pulls the curtain back on NBC's ratings juggernaut "The Biggest Loser," the "reality" game show which features overweight contestants competing to lose the most pounds. Just in time for this week's reunion special, the Times reports that Season 1 winner Ryan Benson, "who lost 122 of his 330-pound starting weight, will be absent. Mr. Benson is now back above 300 pounds but he thinks he has been shunned by the show because he publicly admitted that he dropped some of the weight by fasting and dehydrating himself to the point that he was urinating blood."
NBC severely restricts cast members from talking openly about their experience on the show. The Times notes:Getting contestants to talk openly about the environment of the program is difficult. Shortly after a reporter started contacting former contestants to interview them about their experiences, a talent producer on the series sent an e-mail message to many former contestants reminding them that "serious consequences" could ensue if they ever talked to a reporter without the show's permission.
To do so could subject them to a fine of $100,000 or $1 million, depending on the timing of the interview, according to the e-mail message, which was obtained by The New York Times. The show's producers did provide an opportunity to interview several former contestants, but the interviews were conducted with an NBC publicist listening in.
Wrong again.I take it you're fat.
Now that IS funny. Sad, but funny nonetheless.Bet they're heading to Mcdonalds.
Stocky or vertically challenged is the proper terminology.I want to know why its wrong to call a fat person fat. Theyre fat. Theyre not plus size. They're fucking fat!
Exactly.Stocky or vertically challenged is the proper terminology.