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Dark truths behind Netflix's 'Biggest Loser' documentary have left viewers asking one major question

Netflix's 'Biggest Loser' documentary has left viewers asking one major question
Netflix's 'Biggest Loser' documentary has left viewers asking one major question

We're living through a confusing time when it comes to diet culture. One sub-section of Gen Z are anti-diet culture, while another is taking Ozempic, and the rest are somewhere between refusing to take the advice of their 'almond' parents, and trying to create their own wellness narrative.

But a new Netflix documentary has made us realise we're actually far more closely-linked than we first thought, because frankly, we've all been left asking: "How on Earth was this allowed to air?"

Fit For TV: The Reality Of The Biggest Loser is causing quite the stir online with the three-part series exploring the toxic behind-the-scenes culture of the popular weight-loss show.

The Biggest Loser was just one of a number of shows aimed at shaming overweight people into being thinner during that time, including Supersize vs Superskinny, Fat Families, and Secret Easters.

The Biggest Loser aired from 18 seasons from 2004 to 2020, and the new documentary speaks with former contestants, trainers, and health professionals about just why it was so controversial.

NBC/Netflix

Those appearing in the documentary include Ryan Benson, Season 1 winner, David Broome, The Biggest Loser co-creator and executive producer, Danny Cahill, Season 8 winner, and JD Roth, another executive producer.

The concept of the show was simple: People considered "overweight and unhappy" would apply to be mentored through an extreme weight-loss program. They'd be met with temptations along the way, and be competing against other dieters to lose the highest percentage of their body weight fort a shot at a $250,000 prize.

However, a string of controversies followed the concept, not least because season 15 winner, Rachel Frederickson, weighed just 105 pounds (7.5 stone) by the finale, having started at 260 pounds (18.5 stone). In 2016, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department also launched an inquiry into allegations from former contestants who claimed they were pressured to take drugs to lose weight.

"This is what America thinks is healthy and safe", host, Alison Sweeney says in the trailer.

One contestant, Tracey Yukich, can be heard claiming that her organs "were shutting down" as a result of the gruelling program, after she collapsed during a beach race.

- YouTube www.youtube.com

“I didn't realise that I had rhabdomyolysis. And rhabdomyolysis is your body's way of saying, ‘I'm going to shut down on you.’ It started with my liver, then it was in my kidneys and then it goes to your heart. And that's where I almost died", she noted.

“I don't remember a lot,” she continues in the documentary. “I remember hearing the helicopter. I just felt like I was floating. And then my grandpa was there. And then I saw darkness. But then I saw light. So I knew, I knew I died that day.”

"In the end, it worked out great 'cause I won, but I was doing what most doctors would say were super unhealthy things," season one winner, Ryan Benson also told cameras.

"The last 10 days I didn't put any food in my body. I was doing the master cleanse, just drinking lemon juice and maple syrup, cayenne pepper, all these tricks that are super unhealthy just to cut weight. At the final weigh-in, we had to do a urine test and they said, 'Ryan, there's blood in your urine,' which obviously means you're so dehydrated."

Naturally, people have been left horrified by the revelations from the show they once loved tuning into.

"I will never forgive The Biggest Loser for villainizing exercising and depicting it as a form of punishment", one viewer wrote.

"Reality TV is just built on exploitation", another added.

"The early 2000s was not for the week", a third noted.

Ultimately, it's prompted us to all pause and reflect on our own attitudes towards diet culture.

Does this officially mark the death of the toxic dieting TV show?

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