Friday, March 25, 2011

575-pound Heart Attack Grill spokesman dies at 29

Heart Attack Grill is an unabashedly unhealthy restaurant — the menu consists of huge burgers, milkshakes and fries cooked in lard — and having such a big man as a spokesman was part of its tongue in cheek "glorification of obesity." But those who knew River said he was more than the larger-than-life caricature he portrayed in promoting the restaurant.

Restaurant founder Jon Basso said he got to know River, first as a customer then as the grill's spokesman.

Written by
Weldon B. Johnson
Gannett/The Arizona Republic
Are you kidding me? Our tax dollars go here folks, taking care of folk that do not care about their health. How do we get out of this crisis? I'm a little worried about our future in America, our people are out of control! Sound off!

Thursday, March 10, 2011

It's Spring and running season, or walking for the beginners!

Take it from me, get outside and improve your disposition. 5 minutes outside will improve your attitude and increase your desire to exercise! Get a friend(s) and enjoy it, walk, ride or jog. Find a safe route or trail and get to stepping.

If you need a little motivation, you only need to feel the breeze, sunlight or wind to know WE ARE NOT ALONE! Love and enjoy yourself in nature. Coach Clement

Monday, July 12, 2010

Group personal training makes it affordable for everyone!

Now is the time, if you ever wanted that "one on one" training and felt you could not afford it, Coachclement.biz can help. Never before has our industry embraced Group Personal Training like it has now.

3-4 people maximum. $50 sessions become $30. Call today for more info. You know how to reach us.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Consumer Reports:Lexus SUV unsafe

Ok, just to make certain you Toyota drivers get it...LEXUS is unsafe...Duh...who owns them...Sounds like McDonald's to me...

Consumer Reports:
Lexus SUV unsafe

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

U.S. kids even fatter than believed, study shows - Kids and parenting- msnbc.com

U.S. kids even fatter than believed, study shows - Kids and parenting- msnbc.com

I could not believe it till I read it. Great news though, through my experience, parents are getting it and so too the kids will too. Let's keep giving it to them "raw"!
Coach Clement

Sunday, February 14, 2010

The Real Deal on McDonalds

McDonald’s spend over $1.8 billion every year worldwide on advertising and promo­tions, trying to cultivate an image of being a ‘caring’ and ‘green’ company that is also a fun place to eat. Children are lured in (dragging their parents behind them) with the promise of toys and other gimmicks. But behind the smiling face of Ronald McDonald lies the reality - McDonald’s only interest is money, making profits from whoever and whatever they can, just like all multinational companies. McDonald’s Annual Reports talk of ‘Global Domination’ - they aim to open more and more stores across the globe - but their continual worldwide expansion means more uniformity, less choice and the undermining of local communities.

MURDERING ANIMALS

The menus of the burger chains are based on the torture and murder of millions of animals. Most are intensively farmed, with no access to fresh air and sunshine, and no freedom of movement. Their deaths are barbaric - ‘humane slaughter’ is a myth. We have the choice to eat meat or not, but the billions of animals massacred for food each year have no choice at all.

DAMAGING THE ENVIRONMENT Forests throughout the world - vital for all life - are being destroyed at an appalling rate by multinational companies. McDonald’s have at last been forced to admit to using beef reared on ex-rainforest land, preventing its regeneration. Also, the use of farmland by multinationals and their suppliers forces local people to move on to other areas and cut down further trees.

McDonald’s are the world’s largest user of beef. Methane emitted by cattle reared for the beef industry is a major contributor to the ‘global warming’ crisis. Modern intensive agriculture is based on the heavy use of chemicals which are damag­ing to the environment.

Every year McDonald’s use thousands of tons of unnecessary packaging, most of which ends up littering our streets or polluting the land buried in landfill sites.

Can we afford to allow our children to eat this poison? Are you a hypocrit, they believe you are.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Want to know what's on your heart?

· Set aside some quiet time to write a letter that no one will read, but will help you to reveal your hearts messages and wisdom.
· Write at the top of the page the question you want an answer to, such as “How do really I feel about Sam?” or “How do I feel about my job”
· Write down all the things you wish you could say, what you wished you could've said, etc – basically getting it all out.
· Include all the memories – positive and negative – you can remember.
· Try not to analyze what you are writing – just let it flow from the heart. Write without judgment – just put down whatever comes to your mind – we will analyze it later.
· When you have finished, leave it for a few hours before reading it, or better still sleep on it.
· As you read over what you have written, highlight or underline anything that strikes you as interesting, unusual or significant.
· These are the messages and the wisdom your heart is bringing through to you. Think about what these messages are, and what wisdom your heart is revealing to you.
· When the time is right, ask yourself what you would like to do with the letter? Put it in a keep-safe box, place in a bottle and let it go in the ocean, burn it, bury it or even send it.

You may also need a Life Coach! Email for more information: life_coach@topcatper4mance.biz

Monday, July 27, 2009

Nearly 10% of Health Spending Due to Obesity

Just to keep you in the know. This is the real epidemic, swine flu aside, how can we move forward without addressing our health, as a nation! Read this:

Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- New research shows medical spending averages $1,400 more a year for an obese person than for someone who's normal weight.
Overall obesity-related health spending reaches $147 billion, double what it was nearly a decade ago, says the study published Monday by the journal Health Affairs.
The higher expense reflects the costs of treating diabetes, heart disease and other ailments far more common for the overweight, concluded the study by government scientists and the nonprofit research group RTI International.
RTI health economist Eric Finkelstein offers a blunt message for lawmakers trying to revamp the health-care system: "Unless you address obesity, you're never going to address rising health-care costs."

"Health care costs are dramatically higher for people who are obese and it doesn't have to be that way," said Jeff Levi of the nonprofit Trust for America's Health, who wasn't involved in the new research.

What are you doing to impact this epidemic?

Saturday, July 11, 2009

8 ways the food industry can hijack your brain!

Excess sugar, fat and salt are just some of the tricks that get us to overeat!

Too much sugar, fat and salt
Most of the foods served at restaurants combine tempting amounts of sugar, fat, and salt.
They are either loaded onto a core ingredient (such as meat, vegetable, potato, or bread), layered on top of it, or both.

For instance: Potato skins:
The potato is hollowed out and the skin is fried, which provides a substantial surface area for “fat pickup.” Then some combination of bacon bits, sour cream, and cheese is added. The result: fat on fat on fat on fat, loaded with salt.

Buffalo wings:
The fatty parts of a chicken get deep-fried. Then they are served with creamy or sweet dipping sauce that’s heavily salted. Usually they’re par-fried at a production plant, then fried again at the restaurant, which doubles the fat. The result: sugar on salt on fat on fat on fat.

Spinach dip:
The spinach provides little more than color—a high-fat, high-salt dairy product is the main ingredient. The result: a tasty dish of salt on fat.
Easy-to-chew foodIt's food that literally melts in your melt. By eliminating the need to chew, modern food processing techniques allow us to eat faster and consume more calories. Processing meat and produce — a techniques employed by many restaurant chains and food manufacturers — creates a kind of “adult baby food.” The harder-to-chew-elements, such as fiber and gristle, are removed in foods such as chicken nuggets, spinach dip, and bean burritos. The result is food that can be eaten quickly, and without much effort.

Consider Chili’s boneless Shanghai chicken wings.

Removing the bone reduces the need for chewing, making the food faster to consume. In addition, the wings contain a solution of up to 25 percent water, hydrolyzed soy protein, salt, and sodium phosphate. The water is there to bulk up the chicken – the industry calls this “reducing shrinkage.” Water is also cheaper than chicken breast, so it’s less costly to produce. And finally, water makes the food softer and chewing easier.

Brain conditioning

The food industry focuses on several factors to influence irresistability, including calories, flavor and ease of eating. Food scientists create “hyperpalatable” foods and the food industry markets “fun foods.”

One way marketers make food fun is by adding dips or sauces, such as Dippables products. Foods such as milkshakes and candy bars stimulate the appetite and prompt us to eat more even after we’re full. These foods layer sugar, fat, and salt in optimal amounts in a way that conditions our brains to eat more and more. Instead of satisfying our hunger, we are setting ourselves up to crave them again. By creating hyperpalatable foods that are entertaining, widely available and socially acceptable, the food industry contributes to this vicious cycle. Millions of Americans report loss of control in the face of food, lack of feeling satisfied, and a preoccupation with these foods.

When in doubt, throw cheese and bacon in it.

It's a standard joke in the world of chain restaurants. But it works. Along with enhancing melt and making food easy to eat, these layers are cheaper to produce than the central ingredient (such as meat or fish) they flavor. They’re also visually appealing, straightforward, and familiar.

Example: T.G.I. Friday’s Parmesan-Crusted Sicilian Quesadilla, is described on the menu as follows: “Packed with sautéed chicken, sausage, bruschettta marinara, [and] bacon and oozing with Monterey Jack cheese. We coat it with Parmesan and pan-fry it to a crispy, golden brown, then drizzle it with balsamic glaze.”

Restaurants assemble food, not actually cook itRestaurants make use of “individually quick frozen” foods. Shrimp, potatoes, and chicken nuggets are blasted with cold air, cold nitrogen, or cold carbon dioxide as they travel along a conveyor belt so they freeze in discrete pieces. They are often partially fried before they are quick-frozen. Then they are plunged, straight from the package and still frozen, back into fat for a second frying. The processing, preservatives, and extra frying required for these kinds of foods add to the caloric content.

The myth of healthy grilled chicken Think you're eating healthy when you order grilled, marinated chicken? Think again. A common way to get marinade into meat is through needle injection. Hundreds of needles are used to pierce the meat, tearing up the connective tissue, to add solutions of salt, sugar, and fat. These injections not only increase flavor, but they also make the meat fall apart in our mouths.

Sneaky sugar.

If a food contains more sugar than any other ingredient, federal regulations dictate that sugar be listed first on the label. So, to trick health-conscious mothers who scan food labels for the word "sugar," manufacturers hide the amount of sugar by listing its different sources separately, pushing each down the list. Breakfast cereal, for example, often includes some combination of sugar, brown sugar, fructose, high-fructose corn syrup, honey, and molasses — each listed separately.

Creative chemistry.
Chemical processing evolved to extend the shelf life of products and to lower food costs. More recently, the industry has directed its creative chemistry toward increasing sensations like “mouth feel” and finding new ways to artificially simulate real flavors using flavor enhancers. It’s all about creating novelty and impact to encourage people to consume more.
(For more: msnbc.com/diet_health)

Monday, May 11, 2009

Remember, red meat, pork, dairy, sugar, salt and soda WILL shorten your LIFE!

HOW TO CUT CANCER RISKS
The American Institute for Cancer Research and the World Cancer Research Fund recommend:
• Maintaining a healthy body mass index of 18.5 to 24.9.
• Limiting consumption of red meat to no more than 18 ounces (cooked) a week. (ELIMINATE Red Meat/Pork - Coach Clement, why risk it?)
• Eliminating processed meats such as bacon, ham, sausage and lunchmeat.
• Eating five servings or more of fruit and vegetables a day.
• Limiting consumption of alcohol to no more than two drinks a day for men and one for women.
• Exercising at least 30 minutes a day.
• Limiting consumption of salt.
• Limiting processed foods high in added sugar and fat.