This is quite funny...
If you are easily offended by swear words then do not watch... You have been warned... Hope you enjoy...
http://www.illwillpress.com/fatkins.html
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This is quite funny...
If you are easily offended by swear words then do not watch... You have been warned... Hope you enjoy...
http://www.illwillpress.com/fatkins.html
LMFAO!!! :D
Roxy
funny - lol :D
That little animated squirrel said it better then anyone I've ever heard.
:D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D
I laughed so hard I almost choked on my hot chocolate soy milk.
My favorite part is about the apple : the scream of frustration is brilliant.
Thanks, Tricia.
regards,
globesetter
baaaahahahahahhaha!
my sister and her husband keep trying this diet!!!!!! im definitely showing them this.
i cant stop watchin this cartoon.. its jus too funny...
Love it!! :D
yeah, that is pretty offensive.
hence the warning... im not too offended by swear words but i realize other ppl may be...
I was just sitting there most of the time and was thinking I enjoy it, I like the whole part about the image made by our society, this is funny and smart...and then the end came and he sings that little ditty about "I want my waffle sundae. Give me my carbs." and I busted up. I loved that part so much.
Thanks.
i love that part too at the end... ahh hes such a cute little squirrel...
Good stuff!!! Thanks
That was awesome!
Dr. Michael Gregor has compiled all the facts that can be found on the Atikins diet - or low carb in general, and has put up a comprehensive website about it - http://www.AtkinsFacts.org
regards,
globesetter
This idea that "maybe calories, not carbohydrates, are to blame for our obesity epidemic," and that low-carb diets work solely by lowering calories, is unfounded. In fact, in studies where people ate the same number of calories where one group ate calories from carbs and the other ate calories from fats, the latter group lost the most weight. That's simply not all there is to it. I'm looking around and trying to find where I saw this study.
I think the main problem with low carb diets is that people ONLY get the "low carb" message, and get excited about eating high fats, and the wrong fats. I think if they put a little more effort into studying what the idea is behind low-carb diets, and what the idea is not, they'd manage to eat healthy, including enough vegetables and the right kind of meats, and maintain health while losing more weight than they've been able to in the past. But people, perhaps especially Americans, are notorious for not wanting to learn/research about decisions.
All studies ever done on low carb diets and their results are compiled on this site - Dr. Gregor, is a very thorough researcher and post all sources - everything he reports can be checked. For example:
The world's largest organization of food and nutrition professionals,[7] calls the Atkins Diet "a nightmare of a diet."[8] The official spokesperson of the American Dietetic Association elaborated: "The Atkins Diet and its ilk--any eating regimen that encourages gorging on bacon, cream and butter while shunning apples, all in the name of weight loss--are a dietitian's nightmare."[9] The ADA has been warning Americans about the potential hazards of the Atkins Diet for almost 30 years now.[10] Atkins dismissed such criticism as "dietitian talk".[11] "My English sheepdog," Atkins once said, "will figure out nutrition before the dieticians do."[12]
The problem for Atkins (and his sheepdog), though, is that the National Academy of Sciences, the most prestigious scientific body in the United States, agrees with the AMA and the ADA in opposing the Atkins Diet.[13] So does the American Cancer Society;[14] and the American Heart Association;[15] and the Cleveland Clinic;[16] and Johns Hopkins;[17]and the American Kidney Fund;[18] and the American College of Sports Medicine;[19] and the National Institutes of Health.[20]
In fact there does not seem to be a single major governmental or nonprofit medical, nutrition, or science-based organization in the world that supports the Atkins Diet.[21] As a 2004 medical journal review concluded, the Atkins Diet "runs counter to all the current evidence-based dietary recommendations."[22]
A 2003 review of Atkins "theories" in the Journal of the American College of Nutrition concluded: "When properly evaluated, the theories and arguments of popular low carbohydrate diet books... rely on poorly controlled, non-peer-reviewed studies, anecdotes and non-science rhetoric. This review illustrates the complexity of nutrition misinformation perpetrated by some popular press diet books. A closer look at the science behind the claims made for [these books] reveals nothing more than a modern twist on an antique food fad."[23]
regards,
globesetter
All right, and I disagree. Counter to all the current "evidence-based" dietary recommendations indeed! Low-fat diets were in vogue way before any basis of evidence was found for them, and although I don't have a huge problem with them, there are plenty of misconceptions and oversimplifications in research done to "prove" that low-fat is the way to go. Also, there are plenty of people who low-carb incorrectly and unsafely.
I haven't read the whole site yet which is why I only made a comment about one statement I saw that I thought was incorrect based on a study I'd seen previously. Frankly, I think usually people who've already made up their minds start poking around to support their decisions, quote a bunch of people who agree with them, etc. etc., which is sort of how I feel about PCRM as well. Rest assured I'll look further, though, and see if I think this is the case.
By the way, ALL studies done on the Atkins diet are compiled on the site? I'll look a little harder when I'm not at work, but so far, I can't find the short-term study where those on a low-carb diet had lower risk factors for heart disease than those on a regular diet. This looks, as I stated before, pretty one-sided.
:lol: Too funny. But I have seen plenty of fat squirrels. Maybe it's a southern thing:shrugs:
I've always wondered how people can work so hard to defend atkins.
Nice link. Thanks.
Usually it starts with reading some things that convince you it's not quirky at all, but based on how your body works. Then you read some things about how base-less a low-fat diet was in the beginning, and the mysterious nature of the connections between things like cholesterol and heart disease. It makes you think it's not such a clear-cut subject. Then you start hearing things about heart disease risk factors and weight decreasing on a low-carb diet. Finally, you know people who are healthier and who weigh less using the diet.
Basically, a lot of people decide to make fun / criticize Atkins who don't know too much and say things like "well they'll be sorry when they have a heart attack!" I mean, if you've read about it (and at least I know globesetter has read about it), that's one thing. But I get sick of baseless criticism about something that was what people needed: to hear that they were eating the wrong carbs (breads and sugars) and too much of them. The only thing you might not agree with is limiting your vegetable intake, but even with the limit, you can get plenty of fruits and vegetables on the diet. And contrary to what the news media and commercials lead you to believe, not everyone on Atkins eats steak and bacon everyday. My parents eat lean meats with a lot of flavor, fruits, vegetables, and even a dessert every now and then (cheesecake's a favorite). They drink tons of water, exercise -- they're healthy while limiting their carb intake so as to encourage their body to use their fat stores.
There's nothing crazy about the diet when done right. The way it's marketed, though, is key to helping people understand how to do it right.
Suppose that Dr. Atkins did't really die from a fall on the street. If he in fact died of a heart attack wouldn't there be many people who could stand to lose financially... (cue Perry Mason music) :eek:
[QUOTE=
There's nothing crazy about the diet when done right. The way it's marketed, though, is key to helping people understand how to do it right.[/QUOTE]
I must tell you, you are misinformed. High protein diets are dangerous. Too much protein damages the kidneys and other organs! It also creates an ACID condition in the body that is toxic!
Dr. Atkins is not the first one to create this way of "dieting". Au contraire- he merely jumped on the bandwagon. Before him there was "The Airforce Diet" The Drinking Man's Diet" and more! They all are based on the same premise- an unhealthy one!
Throughout time, the areas of the world and peoples who have had less of the major killer diseases are those that follow a high carbohydrate/starch based diet! Read about "KETOSIS", and what it does to your system and then decide for yourself if this is not "crazy".
Read up! There is so much information out there and you can find the truth!
Well I think everyone's aware he had heart problems, but I also think that (a) his heart troubles were reportedly caused by various factors, and (b) one man's death does not a study make. There was that whole big scandal about that that PCRM tried to scare up, but I don't know that it really did much damage to the reputation of the diet for the people who were on it and saw their lives changing.
I just have an issue with deciding people must be ignorant if their diet choices are different than yours. Especially since my parents are some of these low-carb people, and they've read plenty, understand the mechanisms, have experienced remarkable weight loss, and are living on a healthy, very well-managed diet.
Actually, there's only evidence for this in kidneys that are ALREADY damaged, so far as I can tell from all I've read on the subject.Quote:
ConsciousCuisine
THAT's what bothers me -- people assuming that if you disagree with them, you must not have read about it. My parents have been in ketosis for about 6 months now. Also, I've ready plenty on various diets. While I'm not saying this is the only thing that works, I don't think it's inherently an unhealthy idea.Quote:
Read up! There is so much information out there and you can find the truth!
It's just that I've gotten kinda good at spotting scams, and Atkins has scam written all over it. To bad the health of millions is being destroyed. Oh well.
Howso?
I never said I shouldn't listen to you. It just frustrates me when people assume people who disagree with them have not looked into their opinion.Quote:
Oh, I guess you shouldn't listen to me.
I didn't really think I reacted badly. I'm sorry if you thought I my tone was different than I meant it to be. I was just expressing frustration. Also, I not only love my parents, but have seen their health improve as a result of the low-carb, healthy diet they are following.Quote:
Your reaction/response to my well-intentioned gift prooves my approach to be more than you can handle or are ready for. Most people would be in defense of what thier loved ones are doing, even if it is a poor choice, I suppose. I am the opposit. I am pained when I see people I love doing stupid, unhealthy and dangerous things.
I'm sorry if I offended you, but I've spent a good amount of time reading on the subject and, while I certainly am not implying that I know more about it than you, I have made what I feel is an educated decision to -- while not necessarily supporting -- not condemn people who choose this diet option, since I certainly do think it can be done healthily.
Low-carb craze fails to cross Atlantic
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Frances D'Emilio
Aug. 9, 2004 | ROME (AP) -- Continental low-carb? No thanks. We'll have slabs of black bread for breakfast, rigatoni with broccoli and hot pepper sauce for lunch and a plate of shrimp paella for supper.
While recipe books for diets like Atkins and South Beach are gospel for many in the United States, the American craze for low-carb versions of brownies, breads and pasta hasn't crossed the Atlantic to the Continent.
Only Britain, where junk-food habits and ample figures often mirror those of their American cousins, is turning into an island of low-carb fans.
"The Atkins Diet craze that has gripped America will not result in Germans eating more sausage and less potatoes," said Dr. Volker Pudel, director of nutrition psychology and research at the University of Goettingen in Germany.
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"Just think about German breakfast. You cannot just have eggs without the bread, and you cannot eat butter without spreading it on bread. It just won't work in Germany, this diet," said Pudel in a telephone interview.
One reason for Europe's snub of low-carb diets like Atkins and South Beach might be need -- or lack of it.
Europeans like to walk, even when they have no place to go.
An entire European family could make a picnic of canapés from the staggering high pile of cold cuts in just one New York deli sandwich. Italians return from abroad stunned by cherished U.S. dining habits like all-you-can eat restaurants and doggy bags for all you can't eat.
"To give up a plate of pasta for a diet is, in my view, blasphemy," said
Andrea Pargallo, a bartender in Napoleone bar on Piazza Venezia, as he
served customers their morning cappuccino and cornetto (brioche).
"The Mediterranean diet is the best in the world. Indeed, we don't have all so many obesity problems like our friends across the ocean," said Pargallo, 31.
He was referring to Italy's staple diet, praised by nutritionists and built heavily around grains like rice and pasta and fruit and vegetables.
In France, where natives walk dogs with one hand and clutch a white-flour baguette in the other, pharmacist Niama Wallah said she was unfamiliar with the cutting-carbs approach to weight loss.
"But with the level of obesity that you have in America, it doesn't surprise me that people are going to such lengths to diet," said Wallah, who runs a pharmacy off the Champs-Elysées in Paris.
With Europeans so loyal to their linguine and so faithful to their pommes frites, European food manufacturers and supermarket chains haven't been plunging into low-carb product lines.
"We don't have low-carbohydrate products," said Omer Pignatti, a spokesman for Conad, a chain of supermarkets in Italy. "There isn't any on the Italian market and we don't foresee any such initiatives."
Surveys seem to bear out his assessment.
"We've seen low-carb to be an entirely U.S. phenomenon," said Lynn
Dornblaser, director of consulting services for London-based Mintel
International Group, Ltd.
Dornblaser was among those presenting a country-by-country survey of
low-carb products at a food industry meeting in Las Vegas earlier this
month.
In the United States, the number of new low-carb products ballooned from two in 1999 to 1,329 so far this year, the survey found.
Continental Europe saw few such products being introduced until this year, when a U.S.-based company which sells low-carb bagels, buns, cheesecakes and other products, began offering its fare via the Internet to Europe.
In Britain, new low-carb products sharply rose from five last year to 159 in 2004. Among the items are "no-bread" sandwiches sold by a popular sandwich chain, Prêt à Manger.
"We did this very much in response to basically the low-carb fever that was sort of coming over here," Nellie Nichols, Prêt à Manger's head of food, said of the product, which is sold in square boxes to resemble sandwiches. "They are going down very, very well."
"Carbs have become the devil's work, haven't they?" said Matt Hind, 25, a trainee lawyer buying his lunch in central London. "I think people are
always looking for quick fixes when it comes to weight."
With obesity a matter for mounting concern in Britain, the tabloids there sprinkle their pages with names of celebrities going low-carb, including, reportedly, singer Robbie Williams, former Spice Girl Geri Halliwell, actress Minnie Driver and food writer/celebrity chef Nigella Lawson.
Asked why low-carbs haven't caught on in most of Europe, Dornblaser, who
works out of Mintel's Chicago office, said Europeans "have got a better
understanding of portion control," as well as balance and variety in diet.
"In the U.S., rightly or wrongly, we like to have a magic pill."
---
EDITOR'S NOTE: Correspondents in London, Paris, Warsaw, Madrid, Amsterdam
and Frankfurt contributed to this report.
I was in Hawaii just over a week ago (I am based in Australia), and I could not believe how carb obsessed they were over there. Every menu and every second item in the supermarket I saw had low carb this and no carb that, and 'only 7 carbs per serve' labelled all over it. I also saw a lady remove her chicken and salad from her sandwich, eat that and then she was licking the mayonnaise off the bread. HOW SAD!!!!
What I also found sad is that when I got back home, I noticed how carb obsessed we are here too. The other day I saw Atkins food lines in my health food shop...a health food??? I don't think so. Subway has also released its low/no carb menu alternative, and I overheard a girl in my lecture at uni saying that the best dinner for weight loss is just having meat and salad (the salad bit is ok, but where do the potatoes, rice and pasta fit in?) - Personally I cannot form a meal without carbs.
I think the whole world needs to take the example of the Europeans and just realise that the reason they are fat is because they eat too much of everything!!!! Having Europeans as Ancestors (Polish), I grew up with a love for thick dense breads, hearty soups with potatoes and barley...and no one in my family is fat...and I have a BIG family!!!!
Sorry all...I am just passionate because I love my carbs and they should not be blamed for peoples inability to control their food intake (or the fact that their carb intake consists of supersized french fries and butter laden white bagels which are the size of a potion of 6slices of bread!)
I abhor the atkins diet with every thread of my existance :mad:
The last line of that article is so true..... "In the U.S., rightly or wrongly, we like to have a magic pill." Hmm, could the answer to our problems be right in front of us? a.) too much junk food b.) lack of excersize
Low-carb does NOT belong in the health food aisle...... Eergh, frustrating.
The low carb craze is here, though I don't really pay an awful lot of attention to it. The supermarkets are very dominent in Britain with the likes of Asda ( Walmart owned ) , compared to other European countries and British shoppers have become very reliant on them. This may be a reason why fatkins has taken off. Supermarkets are evil.
i can't say i've really noticed that many low-carb products for sale in supermarkets, but i rarely shop in them nowadays. i know Boots (high street chemist) sell a lot of Atkins products, like snack bars and chilled salads - but why anyone would want to pay £3.50 for a plastic bowl full of lettuce leaves and some scabby looking bits of meat i don't know!
i've also seen low-carb chocolate bars such as Kit-Kats in a few shops. they're about 5 times the price of a regular choc bar! do people really crave choc that much?! The low-carb Coke is stupid too, as it has less calories than a regular Coke, but still more than a Diet Coke which has practically none - but as they market it as low-carb they can charge a fortune for it.
it *is* all about a quick-fix, faddy diet that's gonna give everyone some serious health problems in the future...but how can you get that across to the sort of people who say, "i don't care if Atkins kills me, at least i'll die thin" ???? :(
I mostly agree about Atkins, but I think there is something to be said for watching the amount of carbohydrate you eat, or maybe rather the type of carbohydrate (glycemic index/load etc). I used to do the thing of basing meals around pasta, rice etc but I have now upped the vegetable: pasta/rice ratio (so it's vegetables with pasta rather than vice versa) and make sure I have some beans or nuts with it, and feel a bit better for it. I often used to get ravenous and lightheaded a couple of hours after eating and now I don't.
Some continental European countries apparently have a diet which is a bit lower in carbohydrate, or certainly refined carbohydrate, than the typical British or American ones. For example, I gather that Italians usually tend to have their pasta as a starter than as a main course, and the article also mentions black bread which is presumaby rye bread and a bit better for you than the sliced white stuff that sells in vast quantities in Britain.
There's a store in Indianapolis that says "Lo Carb" or something as the sign. That must be the name of it. I shake my head and laugh every time I go by.
Ditto, ditto, ditto - It makes me so glad I don't live in the States anymore. I think it would drive me crazy if I lived over there now. (Or worse yet, I would probably be as daft enough as everyone else and couldn't avoid getting caught up in it ...)
heh, I saw that some time ago, I watched all of the episodes on the page... that foamy the squirrel is brilliant. if you want to see more episodes that were removed from the site because of bandwidth, go to www.scarysquirrel.com it's somehere in there. can't find it? google, man!
...you fat bastards.
heh. when I was watching it the first time my mom heard it and thought it was south park... she rushed to see.
...you fat bastards
lmao
excuse me, mabe a bit off topic, but does lmao stand for "laugh my ass off"? and then lmfao would stand for... "laugh my f***ing ass off... right? :D