You know what makes me sick?
When a product comes out that is so utterly moronic, so completely and thoroughly ridiculous, so clearly and obviously just-plain-wrong, and so bad for you that they have to put millions and millions of marketing hype behind it just to get people to consider trying it.
What makes me even sicker is when people are just plain stupid enough to buy it.
I've often found that something this stupid can only be exposed properly through humor.
Here's a really funny (and eye opening) report on the latest stupid and dangerous diet pill you may have noticed displayed prominently on giant advertising kiosks at Walmart, and other stores. I hate to give these a-holes any kind of mention at all about their "crappy" product, but I'm all about the truth.
Enjoy this, and before you decide to try you-know-what, imagine what it's like to spray pizza oil out of your ass uncontrollably.
Saturday, July 28, 2007
Alli: The Expensive Way to Give Yourself Explosive Diarrhea
Posted by Jason Glassbrook, CFT at 7:17 PM 1 comments
Labels: calories, diets, fat loss, nutrition, personal training, scams, supplements, weight loss
Saturday, February 3, 2007
Don't Get Scammed by False Weight Loss Promises
If you do not know whether or not to believe a weight-loss or nutrition claim, check it out! The Federal Trade Commission (http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/wgtloss.html) has information on deceptive weight-loss advertising claims. Even more about false weight-loss claims can be found at Quackwatch.org.
You can also find out more about nutrition and weight loss by talking with a registered dietitian. To find a registered dietitian in your area, visit the American Dietetic Association (www.eatright.org).
Posted by Jason Glassbrook, CFT at 6:10 PM 3 comments
Labels: diets, nutrition, scams, weight loss