Showing posts with label workout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label workout. Show all posts

Kettlebell fans love the heavy round-shaped weights for a reason - kettlebell exercises combine cardio and strength training together for a time-saving calorie burn. The amount of calories you can burn using kettlebells can be amazingly high: a study by the American Council on Exercise found that the average person burns 400 calories in 20 minutes when doing kettlebell exercises. More research has found that regularly exercising with kettlebells significantly reduces back, neck, and shoulder pain by strengthening core and upper body muscles.


Does all that convince you to add more kettlebell to your life? Read on for tips on choosing the right kettlebell and a few calorie-torching exercises to try.


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Kettlebell fans love the heavy round-shaped weights for a reason - kettlebell exercises combine cardio and strength training together for a time-saving calorie burn. The amount of calories you can burn using kettlebells can be amazingly high: a study by the American Council on Exercise found that the average person burns 400 calories in 20 minutes when doing kettlebell exercises. More research has found that regularly exercising with kettlebells significantly reduces back, neck, and shoulder pain by strengthening core and upper body muscles.


Does all that convince you to add more kettlebell to your life? Read on for tips on choosing the right kettlebell and a few calorie-torching exercises to try.




Wow! We were already impressed by this year's 'American Idol' winner Candice Glover's killer vocal cords, but now we're blown away by her amazing weight loss! We can't get over how great Candice looks and how fast she dropped the weight! Find out all about Candice's amazing weight loss below.

It seems as though , 23, is still burning the fire from her American Idol victory! And that's not all she's burning - since January, Candice has lost 30 pounds and she has never looked better! Candice reveals how she dropped the pounds and is preparing for the American Idol Live! 2013 Tour. Are you dying to know how she lost the weight? Find out below!


Candice Glover's Weight Loss - How She Dropped The Pounds

Candice has never been shy or insecure about her image, but now that she's lost 30 pounds, she's happy to be healthy and looking great! So how did she do it? Well, it wasn't exactly intentional, but it just so happens, that singing your butt off on a television show every week can be quite a lot of work!


'Over the course of the show, from January to May, I probably dropped 20 lbs. And I've lost about 10 more since the finale,' Candice tells PEOPLE magazine.


Candice is in the middle of rehearsing for AI's summer tour and preparing for the release of her album on October 8.


'This weight is just dropping off because of my crazy schedule,' she told PEOPLE. 'I just walk a lot in the airports, and then we are rehearsing the choreography. I call [the rehearsal room] the gym, to be honest.'


Well, we think you look great, Candice, and we hope that rehearsals are going well!


What do you think, HollywoodLifers? Do you think Candice looks great after her weight loss?


WATCH: American Idol: Candice Glover's Winning Performance


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The chubby actress who made her entry into Bollywood with Salman Khan-starrer Veer and then moved on to projects like Housefull 2 and an item number in Ready, was often criticized for her weight and full figure. She's again in the news for losing 10 kg for her upcoming action flick with Rajeev Khandelwal.


Though she defended herself in interviews saying she will never go for the size-zero look, she did lose weight to look more 'suitable' for the characters she portrayed. Even then, Zarine was at the receiving end of many who didn't think she was apt to be a Bollywood heroine.


Zarine once said in an interview, 'A woman should look like a woman. I will never become size zero as I am a Pathan...We are not in Hollywood where actresses do stunts.' But seems like she's ready to throw a few punches and kicks in her new flick. Co-starring Rajeev Khandelwal, the action film requires her to do stunts and for this Zarine's decided to lose 10 kg. Her workout regimen consists of cardio, boot camp, weight training and power yoga.


But this isn't the first time that Zarine had to undergo a weight loss programme. Being on the heavier side, she had to lose almost 43 kg - she weighed a 100 kg at one point and came down to 57 kg. She toned and shaped-up with the help of fitness trainer Yasmin Karachiwalla.


Her day started with an hour of Pilates and weight training three times a week. Apart from these, she'd also swim and jog. In order to increase her metabolic rate, Zarine ate every two hours but stayed away from fried food and sweets.


We hope her strict fitness regimen has paid off and that she looks fab in her next.


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Purdue study finds diet soda may be linked to health problems from obesity to diabetes to heart disease.

Diet soda, it turns out, may not be the panacea for weight loss that we all thought. (Photo: Michelle Pemberton, The Indianapolis Star)


Diet soda, it turns out, may not be the panacea for weight loss that we all thought - and many of us hoped - it was.


In fact, a Purdue University study has found that diet sodas may be linked to a number of health problems from obesity to diabetes to heart disease, just like their more sugary counterparts.


Susie Swithers, a professor of psychological sciences and a behavioral neuroscientist, reviewed a number of recent studies looking at whether drinking diet soft drinks over the long-term increases the likelihood that a person will overeat, gain weight and then develop other health problems.


One large study found that people who drank artificially sweetened soda were more likely to experience weight gain than those who drank non-diet soda. Others found those who drank diet soda had twice the risk of developing metabolic syndrome, often a precursor to cardiovascular disease, than those who abstained.


'The take-home message is for people to be much mindful of how much sweetener, whether artificial or sugar, they're actually consuming. '


- Susie Swithers, Purdue University professor

Surprisingly, some of the studies suggested diet soda may be just as bad for our health as non-diet.


'Are diet sodas worse for you than regular sodas? I think that's the wrong question,' said Swithers, who is also a member of Purdue's Ingestive Behavior Research Center. 'It's, 'What good are sodas for you in the first place?' '


The studies included drinks containing aspartame, sucralose and saccharin. About 30 percent of American adults regularly consume these sweeteners.


While research indicating that diet soda might not be a health food has been around a few decades, in the past 25 years, Americans' consumption of these drinks have skyrocketed, among a proliferation of options and concerns over obesity.


Such thinking has driven many schools and hospitals to stop offering sugary sodas in their cafeterias and vending machines in an effort to improve the health of their patrons.


But research, such as that done by Swithers, suggests that tactic could backfire and that there could be serious long-term health consequences to regular consumption of diet sodas.


In scientific terms, Swithers' piece is a review study, one that looks at many different studies to reach a conclusion.


The American Beverage Association, the trade association for the non-alcoholic drinks industry, described it a different way.


'This is an opinion piece not a scientific study,' the organization said in an emailed statement. 'Low-calorie sweeteners are some of the most studied and reviewed ingredients in the food supply today. They are a safe and an effective tool in weight loss and weight management, according to decades of scientific research and regulatory agencies around the globe.'


Many organizations, including the American Diabetes Associationand the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, support the use of low- and no-calorie sweeteners to help maintain a healthy weight, the trade industry statement pointed out. In addition, it cited a number of studies that showed that drinking diet beverages will not lead to weight gain or increase a person's desire for sweet foods.


Swithers, whose laboratory research is funded by the National Institutes of Health, disputes that. Her paper appears in Wednesday's issue of the journal ' Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism.'


Some studies have shown that when people drink diet soda, they engage in what's known as 'cognitive distortion,' deciding that since they saved on liquid calories they can splurge elsewhere - the 'diet coke and fries' order.


'(Low-calorie sweeteners) are a safe and an effective tool in weight loss and weight management, according to decades of scientific research and regulatory agencies around the globe. '


- American Beverage Association statement

However, something else may be going on. Studies in animals note a link between consuming artificial sweeteners and overeating that leads to weight gain, said Swithers, whose own research relies on animal models. Somehow artificial sweeteners throw off the body's ability to know how many calories it needs.


'We think there's a much more basic fundamental learning process that's getting interrupted,' she said.


Normally when someone consumes something sweet, the body expects calories and sugar to follow. But when a person drinks diet soda the payoff never arrives.


'You get this kind of confusion and that can lead to overeating, and at least in the animal model that can lead to an increase in blood sugar spikes,' Swithers said.


Of course, diet sodas are not the only places that artificial sweeteners creep into our diets. Some yogurts and baked goods incorporate the no-cal sweet stuff.


Still, there's enough data on diet soda here, she added, for people to act.


'The take-home message is for people to be much mindful of how much sweetener, whether artificial or sugar, they're actually consuming,' she said. 'We're talking about a health issue here. We're not talking necessarily just about weight gain or weight loss. ... Science suggests that people who drink soda regularly end up with worse outcomes.'


A DIET soft drink a day could be making you fat, more likely to get diabetes and at higher risk of cardiovascular disease.

Artificial sweeteners used in these drinks are meant to give you the taste without the calories but a major review of scientific studies suggests they may instead interfere with the body's normal energy regulation.


Researcher Susan Swithers of Purdue University in the US says sweet tastes normally trigger a psychological response that signals the arrival of nutrients in the stomach.


However, research shows when artificial sweeteners are consumed no such energy burst follows the taste and over time this appears to weaken the body's natural response to a sweetness.


'By weakening the validity of sweet taste as a signal for caloric post-ingestive outcomes, consumption of artificial sweeteners could impair energy and body weight regulation,' she says in a paper published in Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism.


The research looks at 15 large health studies from around the world that included data on artificial sweetener consumption over the past 40 years.


The clear conclusion was that there was 'little support for artificially sweetened beverages in promoting weight loss or preventing negative health outcomes such as Type 2 Diabetes, metabolic syndrome (increased blood pressure, high fasting blood glucose, large waist circumference, high cholesterol), and cardiovascular events,' the study says.


Instead, a number of the studies suggested that people who regularly consumed artificially sweetened beverages were at increased risk compared with those that did not.


The San-Antonio Heart Study of 1250 men and women found risk of weight gain and obesity were greater in those consuming artificially sweetened beverages than those who did not.


A European study of over 66,000 women and a health professionals study of around 40,000 men found the risk of Type 2 diabetes doubled for the heaviest drinkers of artificially sweetened beverages.


The Nurses Health Study which included over 88,000 women found the risk for type 2 diabetes was increased by consuming only one artificially sweetened beverage a day.


While a study of normal weight children assigned to drink a single artificially sweetened beverage a day gained less weight than those who consumed one sugar sweetened beverage a day.


A second study of overweight and obese adults who substituted water or artificially sweetened beverages for sugar sweetened beverages found while there was an improvement in blood sugar levels in those consuming water, no such effect happened in those consuming artificially sweetened beverages.


The study comes as new research shows increasing exercise rates in the US have not helped cull rising obesity rates.


Obesity rates increased across the US from 2001 to 2009 despite an increase in the prevalence of sufficient physical activity and the George Institute's Bruce Neal says the most likely explanation is the 'excess of energy provided by the food supply'.


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NBC easily led another Tuesday night with a new episode of America's Got Talent. The series pulled in 2.5 rating among adults 18-49, up one-tenth of a point from last week's season low in the demo. Betty White's Off Their Rockers (1.0 adults) was up two-tenths from last week's series low, giving NBC an average 2.0 rating with adults 18-49 for the night and 7.6 million viewers.


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A steady So You Think You Can Dance pulled a 1.5 adults rating and 4.4 million viewers on Fox, enough to give it second-place status in the key demo.


CBS encores, averaging a 1.0 rating with adults 18-49 and 6.7 million viewers, topped ABC. The alphabet had one lone original in Extreme Weight Loss (1.1 adults), up a tenth of a point from last week. ABC averaged a 0.9 demo rating and 3.1 million viewers for the night.


The CW, also in repeats, brought in a 0.2 adults rating and 495,000 viewers.


Univision averaged 1.5 rating with adults 18-49 and 3.8 million viewers, while Telemundo pulled a 0.8 adults rating and 1.9 million viewers.


Best way to lose weight is to be ambitious but flexible Better to set yourself a weight loss goal range rather than specific target Those who have weight loss range more likely to repeat diet

By Bianca London


PUBLISHED: 08:14 EST, 10 July 2013 | UPDATED: 08:28 EST, 10 July 2013


Anyone who has embarked on a diet knows that it can be an uphill battle that requires determination, perseverance and a lot of will power.


And whether it is a precise number of pounds, a dress size or an exact time frame, dieters often set specific goals for themselves in the battle against the bulge.


But according to the latest study, this isn't the best way to go about shifting unwanted weight and people are more likely to lose weight when they are ambitious yet flexible.



According to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research setting high-low range goals - for example 'lose 2 to 4 pounds this week' - compared to specific goals - such as 'lose 3 pounds this week ' - gives dieters a greater chance of success.



Authours of the study, Maura L. Scott (Florida State University) and Stephen M. Nowlis (Washington University in St. Louis), say: 'High-low range goals influence consumer goal reengagement through feelings of accomplishment, which itself is driven by the attainability and challenge of the goal.'


In a study, individuals in a weight loss programme set either high-low range goals or single number goals.


When the programme came to an end, those who had set high-low range goals re-enrolled in the programme, even though there was no difference in actual average weight loss between the two groups.


The research found that having a high-low range goal can offer 'the best of both worlds' because of its flexibility and also encourages dieters to repeat the diet.


Researchers say that the high end of the goal (such as 'lose 4 pounds') increases the challenge, and the low end goal ('lose 2 pounds') increases its attainability, therefore making it a happy medium.


A single number goal (lose 3 pounds) may, however, be perceived by dieters as a compromise and is therefore less challenging and less attainable.


They concluded: 'Consumers are more likely to pursue a goal when they set a high-low range goal instead of a single number goal.


'Consumers experience a greater sense of accomplishment when a goal is both attainable and challenging, and this makes them want to continue to pursue or reengage their goal.'


DIETS BY NUMBERS

In order to lose weight, eating low-calorie protein is a must. Protein offers sustained energy, satiates your hunger, and curbs sugar cravings. Choosing low-calorie, low-fat protein sources is a must and while Greek yogurt has gained a lot of recognition, don't leave out the unsung hero of the protein world - cottage cheese. Here are some ways this simple food can help you drop pounds.



Breakfast: High-Protein Addition You know how after you eat a bagel for breakfast it's tough to shake that sluggish feeling all morning? Protein has the opposite effect. It offers you energy for hours, so you feel bright-eyed and ready to tackle the day. Eggs and yogurt are popular choices, but for something a little different, whip up a smoothie and you guessed it - add cottage cheese to the blender. For 81 calories, four ounces will add a whopping 14 grams of protein to your glass. The blender will puree the cottage cheese into a smooth consistency, so your taste buds won't even know it's in there. Not into smoothies? Enjoy a bowl of cottage cheese topped with fruit for fiber and sweetness, and nuts for even more added protein.


Keep reading to find out two more ways cottage cheese can help with weight loss.


Snack: Low-Calorie Swap If you're a huge fan of veggies and dip, skip the high-calorie dips made with sour cream. Swap it for cottage cheese instead and save over 150 calories, 20 grams of fat, and 45 mg of cholesterol, yet gain over 10 grams of protein. Here's what to do: take a four-ounce serving of one-percent cottage cheese and mix it with a tablespoon of fresh lemon juice, one teaspoon chopped fresh dill, one finely chopped clove of garlic, and salt and pepper. If you prefer a creamier consistency, add two tablespoons of skim milk and puree it with a hand blender.


Dessert: Creamy, Sweet, and Low in Cals Obsessed with hitting the freezer for spoonfuls of ice cream? The high-fat and high-calorie bites won't help your waistline, and the sugar overload will just have you craving more. Whip up this dessert alternative that's much lower in calories, but just as satisfying to your sweet tooth. This is a twist on the fruit and yogurt popsicle recipe you've probably tried. Just add one cup of low-fat cottage cheese to a blender with one banana, six washed strawberries, half a cup of crushed pineapple or peaches, and one teaspoon vanilla. After mixing to a smooth consistency, divide it into four popsicle molds (or kid-size cups lined with foil), insert popsicle sticks, and freeze. After four hours or so, you'll enjoy your guilt-free, low-calorie treat without affecting the numbers on the scale.


Source: Flickr User jules:stonesoup