
09/05/2025
New blog post (link to blog in bio)
I’ve been reflecting on documentary that aired on recently. I do not recommend watching it for many reasons, unless you want to just fast forward from one interview to the next. Thank goodness for Aubrey Gordon.
But what I’ve been thinking about is the connection between The Biggest Loser and the use of GLP-1s for weight loss. Given the amount of time that has passed between The Biggest Loser and the current Ozempic era, it may seem like the two aren’t that related.
But I think they are very connected. I’m not sure we would be in this place with GLP-1s for weight loss if The Biggest Loser never aired.
Image description: there are several slides with quotes from the blog post:
NEW BLOG POST
The Road to The Ozempic Era Was
Paved by The Biggest Loser
The Biggest Loser paved the way for the Ozempic Era. One made humiliation into prime-time entertainment. The other sells
“kindness” through a prescription pad.
Both profit off risking fat people’s lives in the name of thinness.
A show that made this much money, sparked this much controversy, and even inspired academic research seems like obvious material for a documentary. Yet it wasn’t until 2025 that one was released: a three-episode Netflix series titled Fit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser. But the documentary neither broke new ground nor featured more than a small handful of former contestants. In a television landscape that offers a long list of documentaries to choose from, this one stands out for its lack of in-depth research, lack of revealing new information, lack of innovation, and general lack of intrigue. Still, the documentary sits at #3 on Netflix’s most-viewed shows two weeks after its release. The documentary makers knew what The Biggest Loser creators knew: people will tune in when the topic is weight loss, and even more will tune in when it includes the humiliation of fat people in the process.
(Continued in comments)