Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's almost 7 feet tall.
This is the equivalent of a 5'8 man being 275 lbs. Yes still obese, but not completely unfathomable.
theres no way he was fitting into one regular coach seat though.
I'm a 5'7", 275 lb woman who fits into a coach seat just fine.
I seriously doubt that.
Anonymous wrote:Let's be nice ? it's easy to put on but HARD to get OFF!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's almost 7 feet tall.
This is the equivalent of a 5'8 man being 275 lbs. Yes still obese, but not completely unfathomable.
theres no way he was fitting into one regular coach seat though.
I'm a 5'7", 275 lb woman who fits into a coach seat just fine.
Anonymous wrote:He's almost 7 feet tall.
This is the equivalent of a 5'8 man being 275 lbs. Yes still obese, but not completely unfathomable.
theres no way he was fitting into one regular coach seat though.
Anonymous wrote:I'm glad he seems to have taken the incident as motivation to lose some weight. That's the right attitude (instead of Kevin Smith's rants).
That said, I'm always curious how much someone must eat to get to 500+ lbs. He's 1.5 feet taller than me, but weighs more than 4x as much. I've struggled with my weight, but still... you have to be eating an enormous amount of food to get to over 500 lbs.
It takes 3,500 calories to simply maintain that size while at complete rest - basically for your organs to function, breathe, circulate blood, etc. Not including daily activities like talking, walking, let alone to gain.
Anonymous wrote:This happened five years ago! Why the bump?
Anonymous wrote:this guy = classy
Kevin Smith = not classy
not a race issue.
Anonymous wrote:I'm glad he seems to have taken the incident as motivation to lose some weight. That's the right attitude (instead of Kevin Smith's rants).
That said, I'm always curious how much someone must eat to get to 500+ lbs. He's 1.5 feet taller than me, but weighs more than 4x as much. I've struggled with my weight, but still... you have to be eating an enormous amount of food to get to over 500 lbs.
It takes 3,500 calories to simply maintain that size while at complete rest - basically for your organs to function, breathe, circulate blood, etc. Not including daily activities like talking, walking, let alone to gain.