Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just watched it and I’m appalled that millions of people thought this degrading and abusive show was entertaining. I didn’t watch it when it was popular so this was all new to me. How were people not outraged at how abusive Jillian Michaels was? Just disgusting.
Well, hating on fat people and discrimination against fat people is sometimes said to be the last acceptable way to be discriminatory. These were grown adults with no cognitive disabilities- and they didn't choose to say "I won't tolerate you screaming at me, so I'm leaving." They stayed, knowing they would take more of Jillian's abuse. Why? Because that's how desperate fat people are to lose weight, and the results kept rolling in.
Anonymous wrote:Producers of the documentary series were angry Jillian refused to participate in it so I think a lot of this is spiteful producers determined to make her look bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was kind of a nothing burger. It was really always obvious that it was manipulative and extremely dangerous. You can not work out with trainers for 3+ hours a day for months and be surprised that they can’t keep it off.
Isn't Jillian Michaels suing over this? If so, she obviously doesn't think it was a nothing burger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am watching and there is a woman who was kicked off for losing the least, went on the Jay Leno show and he asked:
Jay: What did you weigh at your heaviest?
Tracey: 254lbs
Jay: And what size is that in clothing?
Tracey: Size 22
I knew vanity sizing existed, but I thought that was for regular sizes - my heaviest was 254 and I was wearing 18-20. That is really the only thing that surprised me.
When Biggest Loser aired, I watched enough to know I couldn't watch - Jillian Michaels screaming in people's faces? Telling them to keep going when they're puking and collapsing? Where was the doctor?! I knew instinctively that was not healthy for them.
I'm not sure why you found it surprising? This woman might have been taller or shorter than you. She may have carried weight in a different part of her body. She may have had less muscle mass than you. She may have just preferred a looser fit of clothing than you like to wear. There are many things that will affect your body shape/size/clothing size besides just weight in pounds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jillian has been posting her receipts on instagram.
What has she been saying?
Anonymous wrote:Jillian has been posting her receipts on instagram.
Anonymous wrote:I just watched it and I’m appalled that millions of people thought this degrading and abusive show was entertaining. I didn’t watch it when it was popular so this was all new to me. How were people not outraged at how abusive Jillian Michaels was? Just disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:The guy who won and regained all the weight, obviously he just wanted to be famous. Why audition 3 times and not just commit to it yourself after the first rejection? If your motivation is to just get your fifteen minutes, of course you’re going to gain it all back.
Anonymous wrote:I am watching and there is a woman who was kicked off for losing the least, went on the Jay Leno show and he asked:
Jay: What did you weigh at your heaviest?
Tracey: 254lbs
Jay: And what size is that in clothing?
Tracey: Size 22
I knew vanity sizing existed, but I thought that was for regular sizes - my heaviest was 254 and I was wearing 18-20. That is really the only thing that surprised me.
When Biggest Loser aired, I watched enough to know I couldn't watch - Jillian Michaels screaming in people's faces? Telling them to keep going when they're puking and collapsing? Where was the doctor?! I knew instinctively that was not healthy for them.
Anonymous wrote:It was kind of a nothing burger. It was really always obvious that it was manipulative and extremely dangerous. You can not work out with trainers for 3+ hours a day for months and be surprised that they can’t keep it off.