How do you get eliminated on the biggest loser




















Also, one player threatens to leave after the trainers try to determine what is causing her negative attitude, and an accusation about game play flies during a tense weigh-in, after which another contestant is sent home. Also, tensions are high between the trainers and one team suspected of game play, and a lifting competition rewards the winning team with a prize that everyone wants. This week, contestants are surprised by the return of the blue and yellow teams, who were sent home after the first challenge of the season.

Later, after another elimination round sends a player home, host Alison Sweeney surprises the contestants with exciting news. This week, the contestants head to Colorado to train like Olympic athletes at the U.

Olympic training facility in Colorado Springs. Host Alison Sweeney tells them the game is going from teams to singles, and multiple medal-winning paralympic athlete Allison Jones warmly welcomes them to the U.

Trainers Bob Harper and Jillian Michaels invite two Olympians to help work out the contestants - gold medalist skier Julia Mancuso and Jeret "Speedy" Peterson, the freestyle skier famous for his "hurricane" jump. Olympic speed skater J. Celski cheers them on. Then their exciting week comes to an end as two more players are sent packing.

After viewers learn who was eliminated after the Olympic challenge cliffhanger from the previous episode, host Alison Sweeney tells all the contestants they are switching to blue vs. But after proving victorious at the high-calorie temptation that put their memory to the test, the winner quickly finds their game-changing choices alienating several players - and one of the trainers.

Later, the newly-formed teams face off on the roof of a very tall building for a pulling challenge that will bring the lucky winners a special prize from home. Then Dr. Huizenga meets with contestants to give them their updated "Know Your Number" scores revealing how dramatically their health has improved in just seven weeks on othe ranch. Finally, a tense weigh-in pits blue team against black before another player is sent packing.

This week kicks off with a wild challenge that will test the strength of both the blue and the black teams when each team has to pull a truck - and then put together a large puzzle with the crates they had to stop and load along the way. The winning team gets an amazing prize. Later, the blue team squares off against the black team at a tense weigh-in before another player is sent home.

This week, the blue team squares off against the black team in a food trivia pop challenge that will send the winning team via limo to a day of pampering and luxury while the losing team has to stay behind and clean up the kitchen and the gym! Then popular chef Curtis Stone stops by to help host Alison Sweeney judge a food cook-off challenge.

Each team has 30 minutes to make an appetizer, entr? Then an emotional elimination round sends another player home. This week, the contestants return to their hometowns to visit family and friends. But with those happy reunions comes the challenge of continuing to eat right and exercise despite all of the distractions and temptations away from the ranch.

After arriving home, the players also get a surprise - a gift crate with a stationary bicycle and a DVD of host Alison Sweeney explaining the at-home temptation and challenge that awaits them. Amid all this nebulous cultural toxicity of moguls and heiresses, a series in which contestants were isolated from their families, weighed shirtless on national television, forced to exercise for as many as eight hours each day, and taunted with challenges involving cinnamon buns and cupcakes might not have seemed so obviously offensive.

Or maybe the cruelty was just part of the spectacle. For 16 more seasons of television, The Biggest Loser spawned a colossally profitable weight-loss brand —with cookbooks and fitness DVDs, food-storage options and protein drinks—by insisting that it was helping people.

Its most infamous trainers, Bob Harper and Jillian Michaels, would cycle between modes of sadism and empathy at whiplash-inducing speed. It was about contestants fixing what was broken deep down inside—the emotional trauma and personal failings, in other words, that had led them to find comfort in food.

The longer The Biggest Loser went on, though, the harder it was to maintain this position. Producers, doctors, and trainers on the series denied all allegations. Read: Can television destroy diet culture? It just never came back. And, in the four years it was off the air, a lot changed. Weight Watchers pivoted to wellness , supposedly rebranding itself away from the hard focus of numbers on a scale and toward more general encouragement of health and well-being. Consumers became more skeptical of diet culture, and more cognizant of the societal factors that lead to obesity.

TV also adjusted to the times. Also: The teams are dissolved, leaving the contestants to compete individually. The contestants are split into two teams by a temptation-challenge winner, whose choices come under fire from other players. Elsewhere, Dr. Huizenga assesses the players' progress after seven weeks on the ranch, and a rooftop challenge yields a prize from home. The teams pull trucks and load crates onto the vehicles for a challenge that ends with a puzzle.

Later, the contestants work eight-hour shifts at the food bank and must learn to fit workout sessions into their schedules. Judges Curtis Stone and Ali pick the best-tasting entries and name the winners, who receive a weigh-in advantage. Also: The winners of a surprise food-trivia challenge receive a day of pampering. The contestants visit home and must continue dieting and exercising while away from the ranch. Soon after arriving, the players receive stationary bikes and learn they'll have to ride the distance of a full marathon.

They can also add time to an opponent's ride by eating up to 48 mini-cupcakes. The teams are dissolved as eliminated contestants return to vie for spots back on the ranch. One player is chosen through a vote while another wins a spot during a step-up challenge. Later, a friendship between players begins to falter.

The players have a chance to win immunity by becoming the first competitor to lose 2 percent of his or her body weight. Each person only has one chance to weigh in, however, adding a critical element of timing to the challenge.

Later, the contestants hit the water for a race involving weights. Those who finish may help others complete the challenge. Suze Orman assesses the players' financial health and predicts who will win this season. Also: The contestants balance quarters on a platter to win a cash prize; a challenge to find keys in the pouring rain yields the winners a huge prize; and Bob holds workouts in the mud. The contestants eat at a buffet featuring a variety of foods. The player who consumes the most calories wins the sole vote at elimination.

Elsewhere, Gabrielle Reece works out on the beach with the players; a building-block challenge tests the gang's climbing skills; Dr.



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