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Losing it:
The ultimate
diet challenge
‘Dateline’ put
six people on six diets; who will reach the goal? |
April 22 — What if you needed to get into shape for a big
event you really want to look good for, like bathing suit season or
perhaps, your 25th high school reunion. That’s the challenge
facing six members of the high school class of 1978, each using a
different weight loss strategy. What worked best and who will go
to the head
of the class?
THINK BACK 25 years. Can you remember your high school fight song?
These folk can — well, sort of.
So their fight song is a little rusty. But 25 years after high school,
these middle-aged grads still have plenty of fight and are all up
for an unusual challenge. What’s at stake? Their looks, their
health — in other words, their weight.
Last fall, “Dateline” sent a letter
to the class of 1978 at Quincy High School in Massachusetts, looking for people
who might want to lose a few pounds for their 25th high school reunion this October.
They had to have at least 30 pounds to lose and
get their doctor’s OK. They could pick from one of six weight loss methods,
from Atkins, Weight Watchers or Slim Fast, to extreme exercise, having your own
famous weight loss guru, and even hypnosis.
The idea is to see how well the diets work and
who can lose the most.
We ended up with six volunteers: one of the toughest
guys on the football team; one of the brainier girls, who was president of the
math club; a soft-spoken lady’s man whom almost everyone liked; a busy
bee back in high school who was class secretary; and the homecoming queen — that’s
right, the queen is also overweight.
THE ALUMNI First up, weighing
in at 174 pounds, is former class secretary Lynne Frank. Her goal
is to drop about 35 pounds. Lynne
is the mother of seven children, four girls and three boys. She has
never ever been an athlete of any kind, yet she agreed to see if
extreme exercise — running a 26-mile marathon — would
be enough to get her weight down. To make sure this was safe to do,
we sent Lynne to Evolution Sports Science, a high-tech consultant
for endurance athletes to evaluate her and to oversee Lynne’s
training.
In January, Lynne can half-walk, half-jog
two miles. To make running easier, she put herself on a daily 1,300-calorie
diet, 500 calories less than what she should normally eat. And she
focuses on “Dateline’s” incentive: to send her
to run in the Maui Marathon in Hawaii this September. But despite
all her exercise, her weight doesn’t change.
Next up, weighing
in at 230, is the gifted athlete, Mark Giordani. He also wants to
lose 35 pounds. “Gio” had stayed in shape throughout
his life. In fact he never knew what it’s like to be heavy
until a back injury more than a year ago cost him his job and all
but immobilized him.
Gio: “It’s
been terrible. To have your kids come home and see you on the couch
and not provide for your family is just — I can’t take
it no more.”
To kill time while he waits for approval for surgery
from workman’s comp, Gio started eating more. To his family’s horror,
his weight went as high as 250.
Gio picked the well-known Slim Fast diet, for its
simplicity. He’s recently been in so much pain with his back he hasn’t
been eating much at all. His wife predicts that by adding Slim Fast, he may actually
first gain some weight.
Sure enough, one week on Slim Fast and Gio is up
three pounds.
Next is the homecoming
queen. She’d love to take off 40 pounds. Today Kathy Wynters
sits on the school board, works as a major event planner, has a busy
weekend social schedule, and is an active mother of two. Kathy agreed
to try Weight Watchers, the one diet she’s had some success
with before. Here the food is given point values and the goal is
to stay within a daily range of points. Also, Weight Watchers offers
support, a place to share the daily struggles of dieting.
The first week Kathy kept herself at the minimum
of 20 points, hoping for big results. But she’s not happy.
Kathy: “I lost 4.8 pounds, and I was disappointed
because I starved all week.”
Meanwhile, the lady’s man back in school,
Marc Merlis, tips the scales at 245 pounds. His task is even greater, to lose
50 pounds — which might be tough, given his occupation. He’s a pastry
chef with a major weakness for good food.
What’s happened
to Marc is that around the time he had kids, his exercise fell off
and he developed poor eating habits. Today his cholesterol is 322
and according to his doctor, dangerously high.
Marc agreed to let Boston hypnotist
Tom Nicoli help him. At his first session, the hypnotist takes Marc
up an imaginary flight of stairs. The journey lasts a half an hour.
The goal is to revisit his thinner days and envision a healthy lifestyle.
The next day back at work, Marc is
reeling from the experience.
Marc: “And the strangest thing, I see this
big belly — the belly button was a big red hole with fire coming out of
it.”
Don’t laugh. After one week under hypnosis, are you
ready? Marc lost 13 pounds.
Next, at 300 pounds
is math whiz Eleanor Talbot. Eleanor has an even more daunting goal,
to lose 120 pounds. Married with no children, Eleanor is a meteorologist
who says she has never known what it’s like to be thin. So
we got her the author of the best seller “Eight Minutes in
the Morning,” weight loss coach Jorge Cruise, to be a personal
guide.
At the heart of Cruise’s weight loss programs
is eight minutes of strength training every day, and attacking what
he calls emotional eating.
Jorge: “For you, I know, up until now,
food has been, a good friend.”
Eleanor: “Oh, yes, right, definitely.”
Jorge: “It’s been
there when ever
you were happy or sad.”
Eleanor: “Upset, stressed, right
exactly.”
Cruise leads a weekly conference call with Eleanor
and others battling their weight in which he encourages the group
to turn to each other, not food, to get through the day. And Cruise
says lose weight slowly. The target: two pounds a week. But Eleanor
does even better.
Eleanor: “I have some news to report. I
lost three pounds this week. Yeah.”
Finally, at 328 pounds,
is high school football tough guy Rick Burnes. His goal is the most
ambitious of all: to lose 150 pounds. Under Rick’s yearbook
picture it says, “Hey you want your face busted?” No
one messed with Rick in high school, and no one messes with him now,
except his doctor. Rick: “He just crucifies me, you know?
He’s blunt. Just stop eating.”
Sound easy? Not for Rick, which is why he chose
the Atkins diet, The controversial high-protein, high-fat, low-carbohydrate
diet.
On Atkins Rick does have to give up one of his loves, beer, but still
eats large portions of his favorite food.
Rick: “My breakfast consisted of pepperoni
and cheese.... Lunch was six cheeseburgers.”
And by the way, he’s not kidding. Meat,
cheese and eggs got him through the two-week induction phase, and
his ferocious appetite calmed down..
Rick: “Instead of a 10-egg omelet, I’m
down to three eggs.”
On top of that, he started exercising. But he
has had some diet-related problems, including headaches and severe
constipation.
Rick: “I’m just not getting enough
vegetables and salad.”
But for now the diet is working. Rick’s
lost 13 pounds on Atkins.
As for the others: 13 pounds
lost under hypnosis, 4.5 pounds lost on Weight Watchers, three pounds
lost with a personal coach, no change with extreme exercise and three
pounds up, back on regular meals with Slim Fast. But soon each will
face their own food demons and one may even have to quit.
THE FIRST REPORT
When our dieters agreed to our “challenge,” they
did want to look good for their 25th high school reunion, but that’s
not really why they’re doing this.
It’s about health for Gio, the injured athlete,
who’s battling his weight and his bad back. Three weeks into
his Slim Fast diet, he admits he’s starving.
Gio: “I’m hungry. I’m hungry
most of the day.... I’m still going to bed hungry and waking
up hungry.”
He is so hungry that he calls Slim Fast. It turns
out, given his size, they feel he is not eating enough. And the athlete
decides to go back to the gym — pain or no pain.
Gio: “Just walking into
this place the last two weeks, my spirits have been uplifted immensely.”
After three months, it begins to pay off. Gio has
dropped 10 pounds.
With her marathon training in full swing and consuming
1,300 calories a day, Lynne’s not losing weight. So she contacts
the nutrition captain for the New York City Marathon for advice.
She tells Lynne that given all her exercise
she, too, should eat more, 1,600 calories a day, and she puts her on the low-fat
USDA food pyramid
diet with an emphasis on portion size. And sure enough, her weight
begins dropping. After three months of heavy exercise, she can now
run 12 miles without stopping and Lynne is down 14 pounds.
In February, homecoming queen Kathy is up to her
usual speed, running the annual school fund-raiser and thinking about
her Weight Watcher points. Dinner tonight is to be Chinese food.
Kathy: “But to be honest with you, I’m
saving most of my points today on wine.”
Exhausted from weeks of planning, she wants a reward.
Kathy: “So I still have 20 points left, so
I can still have four glasses of wine, five glasses of wine. All right....
That’s what’s important.”
But points are points. And it must be working — her
old cheerleading jacket fits.
After
three months Kathy has lost even more, 18 pounds.
Eleanor: “I must be honest, this journey
may not be easy and may be painful at times.”
Within a few weeks math whiz Eleanor Talbot’s
life is transformed by her new support group.
Eleanor: “The e-mails have been just so
uplifting.”
And while on a business trip in California, Eleanor
gets to meet her weight loss coach, who continues the loving support.
Jorge gives Eleanor a day she’ll never forget. Everything that’s
happened has left Eleanor giddy.
And right on target at two pounds a week. After
three months, Eleanor has lost exactly 24 pounds.
Over at the Merlis household, someone’s
happy with the hypnotist.
Cheryl Merlis: “Did you tell him your wife’s all excited ’cause
now she can run up, she can actually jump on you and wrap her legs
right around you?”
Now, the man who couldn’t get motivated
can’t be held back. Marc’s got himself a fitness trainer,
religiously listens to tapes made by the hypnotist, and all he wants
is healthy food. For lunch he’s having a black bean burger,
asparagus and a salad. In January, Marc couldn’t
even get into his varsity jacket. Now his wife has a nickname for
him: Droopy Drawers. After only three months under hypnosis, Droopy
Drawers has lost the most so far, a staggering 40 pounds.
And then there’s Rick on the Atkins diet.
Two weeks in, we found him limping, suffering from a painful case
of gout.
Rick: “This particular attack is probably
the worst one I’ve had in a few years.”
t turns out that Rick has a medical condition he did not reveal to “Dateline” until
now.
Rick: “It’s bothering me, that’s
for sure.”
Gout is a buildup of uric acid, that Rick suspects
is caused by all the red meat he’s been eating. In fact, Rick’s
gout is so bad, he lost two weeks of work and wound up at the doctor.
Rick: “Doctor told me the diet wouldn’t
be good for me, cause of my history with the gout.”
But Rick refused to abandon the Atkins diet.
Instead he decides to cut back on meat and load up on medication.
“Dateline” was so concerned we put
Rick in touch with a top Atkins researcher who adjusts Rick’s
diet and sends him specially made “Atkins at home” meals.
All of it seems to help. He says his gout is
gone, and are you ready? After three months on Atkins, the former
football tough guy has lost more than anyone — 50 pounds, a
third of the way toward his goal.
RECAP The
pastry chef lost the second-most — 40 of his 50-pound goal — with
the help of hypnosis.
Our math whiz, Eleanor, likes these numbers.
She’s third, losing 24 of her 120-pound goal with the help
of her own personal coach. And our homecoming queen Kathy is next,
almost halfway home, down 18 pounds on Weight Watchers.
Maybe the only surprise is that Lynne Frank,
training hard for the marathon, has almost lost the least — only
14 of her 35-pound goal. But remember, Lynne is replacing fat with
heavier muscle.
And finally, there is Gio, the injured athlete,
who of all six, can exercise the least. On Slim Fast, he’s
lost 10 of the 35 pounds he wants to shed.
That’s progress all around, but remember,
their reunion is six months away. That’s plenty of time to
lose more weight — or gain it all back. “Dateline” has
been with these dieters since January, and we’ll continue to
check in with them over the next few months. We’ll also take
you to their 25th reunion in October, to see the results of the Ultimate
Diet Challenge.
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