With the diet marketplace being flooded every day with
rapid weight loss claims, these questions desperately need and deserve some honest answers.
This may be a bit of a humorous idea, but it is also kind of disturbing that even with all of the knowledge that we have learned about exercise we are still able to be brainwashed by
fictional weight loss claims.
There is about as much truth to any of those muscle building and
weight loss claims as there is to Gibson's.
For example, Hill's Prescription Diet r / d
Feline Weight Loss claimed chicken on the label, but was found to contain ZERO chicken.
The weight loss claim seems reasonable, but you could just as easily get the nutrients by eating the entire fruit or vegetable, not just the juice.
Did you know that there is little scientific evidence to support
its weight loss claims?
I highly doubt that
their weight loss claims have anything to do with point # 1 and everything to do with points # 2 and # 3 in that list of advice.