The television program “The
Biggest Loser” is touted as a display of how diet and exercise can help
individuals lose weight — no matter their starting point. But new research
suggests the program’s extreme depiction of exercise is more likely to turn
people off than get them off the couch, say researchers from the University of
Alberta.
The ratings confirm that the show
is entertaining. It just doesn’t do anything for people needing to lose weight.
Researchers in the Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation found that
watching a short video clip of “The Biggest Loser” fueled negative attitudes
toward exercise, raising further questions about how physical activity is shown
in the popular media. “The depictions of exercise on shows like “The Biggest
Loser” are really negative,” said lead author Tanya Berry. “People are
screaming and crying and throwing up, and if you’re not a regular exerciser you
might think this is what exercise is — that it’s this horrible experience where
you have to push yourself to the extremes and the limits, which is completely
wrong.”
In the study, researchers
randomly assigned 138 undergraduate students into two groups. One group watched
a seven-minute clip — chosen for its extreme depiction of exercise — from early
in “The Biggest Loser”‘s ninth season, when competitors were struggling with
obesity. A control group watched a segment from the reality show “American
Idol.” Immediately after viewing the clips, participants from both groups were
asked to write down their first five thoughts. Students also completed a
computer test that measured their automatic attitudes about exercise before
they had time to think about the question, plus a hand-written questionnaire. “We
did find that the people who watched ‘The Biggest Loser’ had worse attitudes about
physical activity than those who watched the ‘American Idol’ clip,” said Berry,
adding that the results were consistent no matter participants’ physical
activity levels or weight.
Berry said the results debunk the
belief held by some researchers and many in the popular media that such shows
can be motivational and get people off the couch. In fact, the negative
portrayals of exercise are counterproductive to public health campaigns. “There’s
a lot of effort and good work out there just to get people more active, but
it’s such a small voice in this big wash of different depictions of exercise.
It’s a big mess.”
Still, perhaps we should not give
up on the show as a forum for health education as some episodes feature
participants who have lost weight, are physically fit and enjoy exercise. Berry
and her research colleagues are in the process of analyzing the benefits from
the more positive follow-up episodes with results to be published next year.
Psych Central
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