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Jillian Michaels Considering Legal Action Over Claims in Netflix's ‘Biggest Loser' Documentary

Jillian Michaels Considering Legal Action Over Claims in Netflix's ‘Biggest Loser' Documentary

Fox Newsa day ago
Jillian Michaels says she's ready to take legal action over claims made in a new documentary about The Biggest Loser . Aubrey Plaza opens up for the first time about the personal impact of losing her husband, Jeff Baena. Plus, Madison Beer and NFL star Justin Herbert have fans talking after a sighting on a music video set.
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Rosie O'Donnell calls out Jay Leno for 'mean' 2009 segment with 'Biggest Loser' star
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Rosie O'Donnell calls out Jay Leno for 'mean' 2009 segment with 'Biggest Loser' star

Rosie O'Donnell is never one to hold back. In an Aug. 19 Instagram post, she called out fellow TV icon Jay Leno for a mean-spirited 2009 segment from "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno," which was revisited in the new Netflix docuseries "Fit for TV: The Reality of the Biggest Loser." In the caption of the post, which featured photos of "The Biggest Loser's" Tracey Yukich in the three-episode series, O'Donnell, 63, wrote that Leno was "mean." The "Fit for TV" scene she referenced was one in which Yukich, a Season 8 contestant, tearfully recounted Leno reading her death threats submitted by "Biggest Loser" viewers. The "Tonight Show" encounter originally aired Nov. 3, 2009. USA TODAY has reached out to a representative for Leno for comment. Though many lost weight throughout the series, the tactics at times posed a risk to participants and their esteem; Yukich suffered a near-death experience early in her season, which aired in 2009. A mom of four, she'd started Season 8 weighing 250 pounds. On the first day of filming "Loser," Yukich and her fellow contestants had to run a mile on a beach. With so much on the line, Yukich darted for the finish line, but her body began shutting down. She went from running to crawling to being pulled to the end by her competitors, and then she collapsed. Yukich had developed rhabdomyolysis, described by the Cleveland Clinic as a condition that causes muscles to disintegrate. "When this happens, toxic components of your muscle fibers enter your circulation system and kidneys." Yukich told USA TODAY that she spent more than three weeks in the hospital before resuming the competition, and ultimately shed 118 pounds. "I'm thankful that I was a part of (the show) because it did change my life," she said. "I really meant what I said at the end (when I) said that I was the one that changed my life. I was the one that did the work." 'Fit for TV': What 'Biggest Loser' alumni have to say about the show now Rosie O'Donnell: Bob Harper was 'cruel' on 'The Biggest Loser' O'Donnell also had something to say about another person who appeared in the "Fit for TV" docuseries: trainer Bob Harper. The series' participants had mixed views on Harper, who admitted in an episode that he'd "never worked with obese people. ... I worked with very fit people that were trying to be a size 0 or have a six-pack. It was a huge wakeup call for me." Jillian Michaels breaks her silence, comments on 'Biggest Loser' doc, co-star Bob Harper Season 7 competitor Joelle Gwynn, who got into an argument with Harper during her time on the show over not lasting 30 seconds on the treadmill, said: "I've never seen someone get abused like that. It was very, very, very, very embarrassing." In her Aug. 19 post, O'Donnell wrote, "k now bob harper − can u not say IM SORRY." She added, "Seriously – so hurtful – so cruel - come on bob." On "Fit for TV," Olivia Ward described her much warmer relationship with Harper, saying she'd named her first child after him. Contributing: Erin Jensen, USA TODAY

Sydney Sweeney Claps Back At Bathwater Controversy With Jacob Elordi ‘Saltburn' Reference
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Sydney Sweeney Claps Back At Bathwater Controversy With Jacob Elordi ‘Saltburn' Reference

Sydney Sweeney is calling out critics of her bathwater soap collab. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, which was published on Aug. 20, the 'Anyone But You' star explained why she felt like there was hypocrisy in the backlash she received for announcing her collab with men's personal care brand Dr. Squatch in May to sell bars of soap infused with her 'actual bathwater.' 'It was mainly the girls making comments about it, which I thought was really interesting,' she told WSJ. 'They all loved the idea of Jacob Elordi's bathwater,' she noted, referencing to the 2023 film 'Saltburn.' Solve the daily Crossword

Austin Butler feared he was 'dying'
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Austin Butler feared he was 'dying'

Austin Butler feared he was "dying" when he went temporarily blind. The 34-year-old actor was on his way to film 2023's The Bikeriders when he was jolted awake with a terrible migraine as his flight landed and realised he had lost his vision. He told the new issue of Men's Health magazine: 'It felt like the life was being sucked from my body. 'I suddenly felt a euphoric sensation, and I actually genuinely thought I was dying." The Elvis star's sight slowly returned to normal and he went on to spend the entire day working on set, writing off the incident as a side effect of sleep deprivation. Austin was convinced to put in the best performance, he had to be "tortured", and suffered several health issues as a result, including a pain in his foot for months after promoting Dune: Part Two and appendicitis-like pain that hospitalised him for a week after filming Elvis. He said: 'For a long time, I felt that it [acting] had to be a tortured process and I would come out the other side broken." But mentors such as Laura Dern have helped him find balance between work and his health. He said of the 58-year-old actress: 'She's helping me more and more to see that you can come out the other side, and maybe bits of you have healed, and synthesized, and metabolised. "It can be therapeutic, in a way. 'You don't have to destroy the light.' And the Once Upon a Time... In Hollywood actor has found ways to stop trying to erase himself in his performances. He said: 'Rather than just putting parts of yourself away and trying to pretend that they don't exist, it's like going into the gross bits of yourself - going into the bits that you don't want to look at - and finding a way of integrating that into the whole.' Austin famously poured so much into his Oscar-nominated portrayal of Elvis Presley, he needed to work with a dialect coach to get rid of The King's distinctive drawl afterwards, and he recalled feeling lost once filming ended. He said: 'And then it's done, after three years. And then it's like, Wait, what do I focus on now? What do I read about? What do I watch? What do I like? And also, I haven't talked to my friends. Who do I call?'

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