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Interview with Joel Gates of DozenDiets.com

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Have you ever been on a diet? How many have you pursued? In case you haven’t noticed, there are a few out there. At DietsInReview.com alone we’ve reviewed more than 400 weight loss programs and products- and we’re no where near finished. What if you couldn’t make up your mind, and decided to try them all, or at least 12? That’s what Joel Gates isjoel gates doing this year, and you can follow along at DozenDiets.com.

With 2008 about to begin, and a desire to beat his long-time fight with being overweight, Joel began searching for the right diet to begin the year with (just as so many do). “When I started, I didn’t know what to start,” explains Joel, “I’ve done several in the past with varying degrees of success. I picked out those that I thought might be the most successful. I had some criteria- be able to cheat occasionally, stick with it on a daily basis, that I have confidence in and not too off the wall.” Joel also mentions that his health is important and he does take that into consideration when choosing a diet. Before starting he met with his doctor and just recently had a mid-year check-up to ensure he’s being safe about it.

Each month in 2008, Joel will follow a different diet. Half-way through the year, he’s lost about 43 pounds and 10% of his body fat. (Beginning stats were 234 pounds, 30% body fat) He keeps a daily journal at DozenDiets.com, displaying weight changes, body fat changes, food diary, exercise diary, cheats, successes and everything else that plays into his diet each day. Each month concludes with a summary, where he scores the diet on a 40-point scale, for ease of understanding, forgiveness of a cheat, ease of execution and results.

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To date, he’s completed:

Jan: Low-Calorie Diet
Lost 8.5 pounds
Score 30/40

Feb: South Beach Diet
Lost 11.3 pounds
Score 28/40

Mar: Slim-Fast (tied for first place so far)
Lost 8.6 pounds
Score 34/40

Apr: The Abs Diet (in last place)
Lost 6 pounds
Score 23/40

May: Weight Watchers (tied for first place so far)
Lost 8 pounds
Score 34/40

June: Advanced Mediterranean Diet
Lost 6 pounds to date
Anticipates a high score

July: NutriSystem

Hear my interview with Joel in its entirety below. He discusses his experiences with each diet, which seem to be more male-friendly and which are definitely built for women, and how he plans to continue the rest of the year, considering he’s been far more successful than anticipated.



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Dr. Steve Parker discusses his book, The Advanced Mediterranean Diet

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I spoke with Dr. Steve Parker, author of The Advanced Mediterranean Diet. His new book shares the traditional ideals of the popular Mediterranean-style diet, but he expands on it by making it appropriate for weight loss.the advanced mediterranean diet

“To lose weight, most people are going to have to cut down on their caloric consumption. I adapted it to weight loss by limiting the calories,” explains Dr. Parker. “I tried to emulate the traditional Mediterranean diet to retain the health benefits. The result is my program, ‘The Advanced Mediterranean Diet’.”

Dr. Parker has more than 25 years experience as a physician, specializing in weight loss. He began doing his own research to better understand all of the diets, to offer his patients a better understanding of how they should be eating in order to lose weight. “The answer for me was the Mediterranean diet. There’s lots of clinical studies that support the health benefits of a Mediterranean-style diet. Specific benefits are prolonging life span, reducing rates of chronic disease, specifically certain cancers, cardiovascular disease like heart attacks and even dementia,” says Parker. Most recently, reports were shared explaining its ability to reduce the risk of diabetes.

He says that the “real key” to keeping off weight you’ve lost is by not just dieting, but changing your lifestyle. Dr. Parker says you have to change your relationship with food, and you have to exercise, even if it’s just a brisk walk most days of the week. The Advanced Mediterranean Diet fits that model.


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For more information, read The Advanced Mediterranean Diet review, and enjoy the complete interview with Dr. Steve Parker. He also maintains a blog with more details.



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Interview with Micah McCain from Bravo’s Work Out

Micah McCain was one of the “Sky Labbers” on the recently wrapped third season ofmicah mccain Bravo’s Work Out, a reality show that follows the life and times of the posh Beverly Hills Sky Sport Spa owner, Jackie Warner. What’s a Sky Labber? Part of the Work Out series is following a group of individuals who’ve signed up for Jackie’s hardcore weight loss bootcamp, Sky Lab. Micah was one of the lucky few to participate, and he lost 23 pounds during the filming of the show.

“I started working out 3 months before, worked out on the show 5 months, and it’s been 2 months since,” explains Micah. “Total loss of 71 pounds! I’m tired and I’m slightly hungry!”

Micah works in Hollywood doing a little bit of everything from “entertaining on stage, on camera and on the street,” he says. He has a new cabaret show that’s opening next weekend in L.A. and says that this experience on Work Out means he’s going to be much happier in the clothes he’s wearing while performing.

micah mccainI asked if he’s tried out Jackie Warner’s new Work Out DVD- and he exclaimed that he has not, because he has already learned the tools it teaches. However, anyone who hasn’t worked with the Sky team, he thinks it would offer an amazing workout.

When asked if he has any advice for those facing their own weight loss or emotional issues - Micah said “You’ve gotta mix it up!”. “Right when you feel like you’re getting bored of the food, you’re getting bored of the cardio, you’re getting bored of the training sessions, you’re getting bored in the gym… Please have the power and the knowledge to be aware that you’re getting bored, shake it up and find something new. I couldn’t run anymore. I was dying. I was like, I gotta get a bike, I can’t stop my cardio. And then I couldn’t bike any more, so I started taking cardio dance classes. Every time I changed it I got re-inspired. I would not let myself feel let down that I wasn’t doing what I wanted to do and fulfilling my mission of being a better person.”

Listen here to learn more about Micah’s experience during Bravo’s Work Out, and how it’s positively changed his life since.

Thank you, Micah!



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Dr. Peter D’Adamo explains his new book, The Genotype Diet

I had the pleasure to speak with Dr. Peter D’Adamo, a naturopathic physician, to learn more about his new book,Genotype Diet The Genotype Diet. It’s a fascinating book that explains that you can define a diet and fitness program that is built specific to your needs based on your genetic code. By following simple measurements of your body, explained in the book, you can determine your Genotype, one of six “paths” your genetic code fits into. These measurements include, among others, the length of your ring finger vs. index finger, torso length vs. leg length, blood type, finger print patterns and face shape.

Once you’ve determined your Genotype, you can follow the incredibly detailed diet and fitness plan. Learn the foods that are ideal for you and the foods you should definitely avoid, as well as exercises that are ideal for your body and those that aren’t doing you much good.

You can hear the interview in its entirety below and read a few key excerpts. For more information, you can check out the DietsInReview.com Genotype Diet Review.

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The Genotype Diet is sort of the next generation of the “Eat Right 4 Your Type” books that you wrote 11 years ago, a NY Times Bestseller and Amazon diet books bestseller. Genotype is the result of your continued research, but a little more refined than a diet defined by your blood type and more so based on your genetic build. Explain how Genotype goes beyond the Blood Type Diet.

I wouldn’t say one is the refinement of the other. Actually, they are two separate systems. If you look at what goes into the blood typing system, it’s really a very straight-forward, cut-and-dry relationship.The difference between Blood Type and Genotype - Blood Type is describing a situation and eating in alignment with that. With Genotype, you’re actually describing a character, a certain way a person has been programmed through family history, prenatal experiences or through some of their early lifestyle choices that have resulted in genetics being set at a certain way. Then you understand what that way is and devise a way to be able to optimize that. Genotype is a different way to look at the data- in part it has Blood Type, but it actually has other things as well. One doesn’t obsolete the other.

If people have problems with disorder of the blood or problems with inflammatory conditions in the digestive track, really the Blood Type is a very good system and we tell them that we want them to look at that initially.If we see people who are maybe more metabolically challenged from a weight loss perspective, Genotype is better because it has a more genetic understanding of why people would put weight on as they get older.

How would our readers at DietsInReview.com look at the two different systems and determine which is a better match for them?

They go to [my] blog and scroll down- I designed a little computer program that asks them to fill out a questionnaire and it tells them if Genotype or Blood Type is a better diet for them.

Is there an age that makes sense for someone to read the Genotype? Is there an age that more clearly helps you define what your Genotype is?

Yes. It turns out that growth completes itself about age 16 in girls and age 18 in boys. It’s not going to be reasonable to measure leg length and torso length in a kid who is still growing. The way most people work around this- in the book there is a section called Strength Testing. With Strengh Testing, you look at things like fingerprint patterns, things that don’t change while you’re growing.

Peter D'AdamoIf you have a kid, and you’re interested in getting him on the Genotype diet, then the simple things to do are the non-growth related measurements that are eternal.

How does the Genotype Diet play into a pregnant woman’s diet? Anything she should do differently that could impact the Genotype of her baby?

I would think the Genotype system would be an excellent way to develop a prenatal approach that was about as scientifically optimized as one could make it at this point in time.

The evidence suggests that as well. Not that I’m particularly fond of animal studies as they apply to humans, but with regard to certain genetic functions, they are identical to us.

For instance, if you look at the studies done on certain species of mice bred to have diabetes, bred to be overweight and have cancer within a year of their life, they found if you optimize certain genetic functions with the epi-genetics (not the actual gene, the setting of the gene- like a volume control). You can change in one generation that particular breeding so that the offspring are not overweight, don’t go on to get diabetes and many times don’t go on to get cancer as well.

So, a family with a history of cancer or another illness, by switching to the Genotype now, could slowly but surely remove that gene from future offspring?

It’s a start, because the Genotype Diet is based on what we currently know about the role that certain nutrients have in affecting gene function.

People could potentially save themselves thousands of dollars on personal fitness plans at the gyms and personal diet plans built by nutritionists by spending $25 on the Genotype Diet. Following the plan that is, by design of their body, custom for them.

Those are your fingers you’re measuring. It’s a simple thing like “Is your index finger longer than your ring finger?” It tells you if you were floating around as a fetus in estrogen or floating around as a fetus in testosterone. Then you look at some simple things- Why are we interested in finger prints? Well, they tell you whether or not your prenatal environment was very acidic, or whether or not it had too much glucose or whether the oxygen tension was too low.

Even more cool- if you match the fingerprints from your left hand to your right hand- you get an idea of how asymmetrical you are. It turns out the more asymmetrical a person is- the rougher time they had inside of their mother. The more symmetrical you are, the more fit you are.