"Biggest Loser "Documentary Explores the Dark Side of Hit Show: 'People Like Making Fun of Fat People' (Exclusive)

The Biggest Loserwas one of the most groundbreaking and popular shows in the history of reality TV. Now, a new documentary explores whether the contestants, who tried to lose as much weight as possible, were positively or negatively impacted by the competition. Fit for TV: The Reality of the Biggest Losertakes a closer look at the ratings juggernaut, which debuted on NBC in 2004, where it stayed for 18 seasons, moving to the USA Network in 2020. The reality competition challenged contestants to lose weight through diet and exercise, awarding a hefty monetary prize of $250,000 to the person who lost the most weight. In PEOPLE's exclusive first look at the trailer for the three-part documentary, premiering on Netflix August 15, former contestants, trainers, and producers share what went on behind the scenes, from life-changing hopes and dreams to excessive exercise and infighting. Courtesy of Netflix While some contestants recall being desperate to be selected for the show — two women in matching sports bras and white pants are shown, chanting, "All my life I want to be The Biggest Loser," while another woman in a black bikini flashes the camera saying, "I'll do anything to be on the show" — others question whether the promised weight loss was positive — or even healthy — in the long term. The show's contestants were pulled from a pool of people who struggled emotionally. "We were not looking for people who were overweight and happy," executive producer JD Roth says. "We were looking for people who were overweight and unhappy." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Season 7 contestantJoelle Gwynnsays, "People like making fun of fat people," while others involved in the show claim the producers were "reinforcing the stereotypes." Another issue, the trailer says, is that the fitness journey wasn't as healthy as depicted on the show. One contestant claims he was given caffeine pills, while another, season 8 contestant Tracey Yukich recalls, "My organs were literally shutting down." Personal trainerBob Harpersays in the trailer, "Producers love that s--- … They were like, 'We want 'em to puke, we want the madness of it all!' " Other contestants said Harper and co-trainer Jillian Michaels attempted to provide "therapy" to deal with emotional and psychological issues — without qualifications. But producerDavid Broomeinsists it was beneficial: "You tell me one show that's actually changed people's lives the wayThe Biggest Loser has.I'd love to hear it." As Harper says, "To see us in a gym yelling, screaming — that's good TV." Fit for TV: The Reality of the Biggest Loserdebuts on Netflix August 15. Read the original article onPeople

“Biggest Loser ”Documentary Explores the Dark Side of Hit Show: ‘People Like Making Fun of Fat People’ (Exclusive)

"Biggest Loser "Documentary Explores the Dark Side of Hit Show: 'People Like Making Fun of Fat People' (Exclusive) The Big...
Liam Gallagher says 'don't worry' to Oasis fans concerned about getting 'Coldplayed'New Foto - Liam Gallagher says 'don't worry' to Oasis fans concerned about getting 'Coldplayed'

Oasisconcerts are apparently a safe space for fans of the extramarital variety. Liam Gallagher, the brash frontman of the English band, hopped on the mic during a recent concert in the United Kingdom to assure fans they wouldn't get "Coldplayed" at the band's performances. "Do we have any lovebirds in the house?" Gallagher, 52, asked the crowd at their show in Manchester. "Don't worry," he assured, as seen insocial media videofrom July 20, "we ain't got any of thatColdplay" camera work. Getting some laughs from the crowd, Gallagher said it "doesn't matter to us" who their fans are "mingling" or "tingling" with. It's "none of our" business, he added. Coldplay gives fans warningin first concert since viral 'Kiss Cam' video Gallagher, with brother Noel, 58, set off on theOasis Live '25reunion tour July 4. Other artists have warned concertgoers that their secrets would remain within the walls of the venue in the wake of theinfamous, immediately viral videoof a couple who didn't want to be on camera. "If there's anybody here with their side chick or whatever, I think you're safe here," pop-country starMorgan Wallentold the crowd with a shrugat his July 18 concert in Glendale, Arizona. "I don't condone cheating anymore," he added. Stephen Colbert spoofs Coldplayconcert 'Kiss Cam' with Seth Meyers, Jimmy Fallon Country artistLuke Bryanjoked about the incident during hisJuly 17 concertin Greenville, South Carolina, saying, "We're gonna shine our cameras on anybody. Who's here with their secretary tonight?" Bryan vamped part of his song "Strip it Down" before adding, "do not get caught tonight." The incident has even made it as far aslate-night TVwith a star-studded spoof on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert." Mock hiding from the camera, cameos popped up from CNN'sAnderson Cooperand Bravo'sAndy Cohen; fellow late night hostsJimmy FallonandSeth Meyers; "Happy Gilmore 2" starsAdam Sandlerand Christopher McDonald; as well as aJohn Oliverof HBO's "Last Week Tonight" withJon Stewartof "The Daily Show." Contributing: James Powel and Bryan Alexander This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Liam Gallagher jokes Oasis shows are safe after Coldplay kiss cam

Liam Gallagher says 'don't worry' to Oasis fans concerned about getting 'Coldplayed'

Liam Gallagher says 'don't worry' to Oasis fans concerned about getting 'Coldplayed' Oasisconcerts are apparently a safe...
Teddi Mellencamp speaks out after attempted burglary at her LA homeNew Foto - Teddi Mellencamp speaks out after attempted burglary at her LA home

An attempted burglary reported Monday night inLos Angelestook place at the home of former "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" starTeddi Mellencamp. Mellencamp and her family were home at the time of the attempted break-in, she told ABC News Tuesday. "We are grateful that everyone is unharmed. While we are shaken, we are fortunate to have the latest in home security systems which scared off the intruders," Mellencamp and her estranged husband Edwin Arroyave said in a statement to ABC News. "Authorities were alerted and swiftly responded. We appreciate everyone's heightened concern in light of recent criminal activities in our area, but we are safe." Mellencamp shares three children and a stepchild with Arroyave, from whom she announced her separation in November. The Los Angeles Police Department said Tuesday that a call came in around 10:15 p.m. local time Monday for a burglary with residents inside. When police officers arrived at the home, the suspected burglars had left the home without obtaining full access The suspects gained entry to the property possibly through the garage but did not get far before they ran off, according to the LAPD. The suspects got away in a black BMW. The LAPD says it is looking for two males in black hooded sweatshirts. Mellencamp, now a podcast host and the founder of an accountability program, is the daughter of music legend John Cougar Mellencamp. The mom of fourannouncedearlier this year that she was diagnosed with Stage 4 melanoma, a type of skin cancer, which she said had spread to her brain and lungs. Teddi Mellencamp says she has 'multiple tumors': 'I will win this battle' Mellencamp hassaidshe is currently undergoing both radiation and immunotherapy treatment. The attempted burglary at Mellencamp's home Monday happened just 11 minutes after there was a similar call at another home, according to police. The suspects were also gone from that address when officers arrived. It does not appear anyone was home at that address, and it is unclear if anything was taken at that home. Just one week ago, on July 14, a couple -- "American Idol" music supervisor Robin Kaye and her husband Thomas Deluca -- were foundshot to deathin their Los Angeles home during a welfare check. Teddi Mellencamp opens up about Stage 4 melanoma diagnosis, how her kids are coping A 22-year-old suspect -- Raymond Boodarian -- isaccusedof scaling a fence onto the couple's Encino property and allegedly shooting and killing them during a struggle when they arrived home from the grocery store, authorities said. Boodarian has been charged with two counts of murder and a count of residential burglary, with the special circumstance allegation of multiple murders and murder during the commission of a burglary, according to the Los Angeles County District Attorney's office. The district attorney, Nathan Hochman, held a town hall meeting with residents Monday -- the same night as the attempted burglary at Mellencamp's home -- to talk about the case.

Teddi Mellencamp speaks out after attempted burglary at her LA home

Teddi Mellencamp speaks out after attempted burglary at her LA home An attempted burglary reported Monday night inLos Angelestook place at t...
Vermont judge refuses to delay death penalty decision for Zizian charged in border agent's deathNew Foto - Vermont judge refuses to delay death penalty decision for Zizian charged in border agent's death

A federal judge in Vermont has refused to delay a decision on whether a woman charged in the death of a U.S. Border Patrol agent will face the death penalty. In an order made public Monday, Chief Judge Christina Reiss denied a motion from Teresa Youngblut, 21, who is accused of opening fire on agent David Maland during a traffic stop on Jan. 20. Youngblut, who is part of a cultlike group known asZiziansthat has been connected tosix killings in three states, faces a July 28 deadline to explain why prosecutors should not seek the death penalty, even though she has yet to be charged with a crime eligible for such a punishment. Youngblut's attorneys asked the judge to set a new deadline of Jan. 30, 2026, for submitting mitigating evidence and to prohibit prosecutors from making a decision until after the material has been reviewed. The judge expressed concern that the government is ignoring its own procedures and needlessly rushing the case but ultimately said "both the process and the ultimate charging decision are the sole prerogative" of prosecutors. The deadly shootout in Vermont happened on Inauguration Day, just hours before PresidentDonald Trumpsigned a sweeping executive order lifting the moratorium on federal executions. Attorney General Pam Bondi later cited Maland's death in directing federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty in murder cases involving law enforcement officers unless they find significant mitigating circumstances. Youngblut's lawyers argue the government has imposed a "radically inadequate" and "extraordinarily rushed" timeline for that determination. They filed a motion Monday asking the judge to reconsider her decision, saying a delay will not diminish prosecutors' authority. "Should the court grant Youngblut's motion, nothing will prevent the government from indicting death-eligible offenses or seeking the death penalty in this case," they wrote. "The government will simply be required to do so on a slightly less accelerated timeline." At the time of the shooting, authorities had been watching Youngblut and her companion, Felix Bauckholt, for several days after a Vermont hotel employee reported seeing them carrying guns and wearing black tactical gear. She's accused of firing at border agents who pulled the car over on Interstate 91. An agent fired back, killing Bauckholt and wounding Youngblut. The pair were among the followers ofJack LaSota, a transgender woman also known as Ziz whose online writing about veganism, gender identity andartificial intelligenceattracted young, highly intelligent computer scientists who shared anarchist beliefs. Members of the group have been tied to the death of one of their own during an attack on a California landlord in 2022, thelandlord's subsequent killingearlier this year, and the deaths of aPennsylvania couplein between. LaSota and two others face weapons and drug charges in Maryland, where they werearrested in February,while LaSota faces additional federal charges of being an armed fugitive.

Vermont judge refuses to delay death penalty decision for Zizian charged in border agent's death

Vermont judge refuses to delay death penalty decision for Zizian charged in border agent's death A federal judge in Vermont has refused ...
Thousands of Afghans face possible deportation after court refuses to extend their legal protectionNew Foto - Thousands of Afghans face possible deportation after court refuses to extend their legal protection

Thousands of Afghans in the U.S. are no longer protected from deportation after a federal appeals court refused to postpone the Trump administration'sdecision to end their legal status. A three-judge panel of the Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Virginia said in a ruling late Monday there was "insufficient evidence to warrant the extraordinary remedy of a postponement" of the administration's decision not to extend Temporary Protected Status for people from Afghanistan and Cameroon. TPS for Afghans ended July 14, but was briefly extended by the appeals court through July 21 while it considered an emergency request for a longer postponement. The Department of Homeland Security in May said it was ending Temporary Protected Status for 11,700 people from Afghanistan in 60 days. That status — in place since 2022 — had allowed them to work and meant the government couldn't deport them. CASA, a nonprofit immigrant advocacy group, sued the administration over the TPS revocation for Afghans as well as for people from Cameroon, which expire August 4. It said the decisions were racially motivated. A federal judge allowed the lawsuit to go forward but didn't grant CASA's request to keep the protections in place while the lawsuit plays out. A phone message for CASA on Tuesday was not immediately returned. Without an extension, TPS holders from Afghanistan and Cameroon face a "devastating choice -abandoning their homes, relinquishing their employment, and uprooting their lives to return to a country where they face the threat of severe physical harm or even death, or remaining in the United States in a state of legal uncertainty while they wait for otherimmigrationprocesses to play out," CASA warned in court documents. In its decision on Monday, the appeals court said CASA had made a "plausible" legal claim against the administration, and urged the lower court to move the case forward expeditiously. It also said many of the TPS holders from the two countries may be eligible for other legal protections that remain available to them. Temporary Protected Status can be granted by the Homeland Security secretary to people who face safety concerns in their home countries because of armed conflict, environmental disaster or other conditions. They can't be deported and can work legally in the U.S., but they don't have a pathway to citizenship. The status, however, is inherently precarious because it is up to the Homeland Security secretary to renew the protections regularly — usually every 18 months. The Trump administration has pushed to remove Temporary Protected Status from people from seven countries, with Venezuela andHaiti making up thebiggest chunk of the hundreds of thousands of people affected. Homeland Security officials said in their decision to end the Temporary Protected Status for Afghans that the situation in their home country was getting better.

Thousands of Afghans face possible deportation after court refuses to extend their legal protection

Thousands of Afghans face possible deportation after court refuses to extend their legal protection Thousands of Afghans in the U.S. are no ...
Mexico's Sheinbaum says 14 Mexicans held in "Alligator Alcatraz" detention center

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Tuesday that 14 Mexican nationals were being held at the U.S. "Alligator Alcatraz" detention center and that her government was seeking their repatriation. "All arrangements are being made to ensure they are repatriated immediated to Mexico," Sheinbaum said in her daily news conference. The facility sits some 37 miles (60 km) from Miami in a vast subtropical wetland teeming with alligators, crocodiles and pythons, fearsome imagery the White House has leveraged to show its determination to purge migrants it says were wrongly allowed to stay in the country under former President Joe Biden's administration. Since President Donald Trump took office on Jan. 20, a total of 73,533 people have been returned to Mexico, mostly by air, including 67,008 Mexican nationals, Sheinbaum said in one of her daily briefings earlier this month. (Reporting by Natalia Siniawski and Ana Isabel Martinez)

Mexico's Sheinbaum says 14 Mexicans held in "Alligator Alcatraz" detention center

Mexico's Sheinbaum says 14 Mexicans held in "Alligator Alcatraz" detention center MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -Mexican President Cla...

 

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