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At a weight-loss group meeting on the same show, one fat woman exercise fat laments that she exercise fat used to be "the thin one" in her circle of friends. "Well, you're fat now, so sit down and shut up!" barks a pal played by plus-sized-and-proud standup comic Loni Love. The fat jokes and blubber exhibitions are gobbling up prime time. Michelle McCarthy, a 35-year-old Austin substitute teacher and mother, has battled her own weight problem since high school and isn't amused. "I'm concerned with the media's apparent trivialization of weight issues," McCarthy said. "TV shows and exercise fat reality series like 'The Biggest Loser' do nothing to strengthen our inner resolve to lose weight for ourselves and for our health. It seems to me that most of the shows focus solely on improving appearance so people aren't viewed as being fat." When the nation's TV critics met in Los Angeles in July to survey the new fall programming, "The Biggest Loser's" trio of executive producers proudly proclaimed that "150,000 unhappy fat people applied to participate" this season. |
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