News about Steve Miller

The most shocking and gross 90s reality shows that are getting a new lease of life on social media: From gay men pretending to be straight to win cash to 'Fatties' from 'North Porkshire' on hardcore diets

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 9, 2024
The TikTok generation can't believe their eyes and ears. Barely born when reality TV first hit our screens like effluent from a fire hose, today's teens and twentysomethings are discovering the very worst of 1990s and Noughties television. Shows that held millions mesmerised in horror when they first aired two decades ago are experiencing a resurgence on social media.

The Feds open a massive inquiry into organ donation companies, alleging that they are only interested in making tissues and leaving badly needed organs behind

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 26, 2024
A new study shows that federal investigators have opened a multi-agency fraud investigation into organ donation agencies. According to The Washington Post, US attorneys from at least five states are probing whether organ procurement companies have been overbilling the government. The investigation included representatives from the Department of Health and Human Services as well as Michael Missal's office, which is the inspector general of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Think Around the World in 80 Weighs is shocking? A look at Noughties weight loss shows that no one will be made today, from Fat Families to Supersize Vs. Superskinny, as Brits are left stunned by a fat-shaming program

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 22, 2024
Around the World in 80 Weighs, Channel 4's latest series, has shocked British people as they travel around the globe to experience different cultural reactions to diet and weight loss. Six contestants returned to Japan, where only four percent of the population is overweight compared to 25 percent of Britons. The participants were able to stand out from the crowds in suburban Tokyo, where schoolchildren were already pointing and laughing as obesity became so common in Northeast Asia. The British people were clearly shocked by the Japanese's open attitude to fat shaming, a controversial tactic in the western world, where doctors have been encouraged to refrain from using stern words against weight control. However, it wasn't long ago that Brits accepted fat-shaming as entertainment, with diet shows dominating the TV schedules in the Noughties. Now that cultural values have changed, MailOnline looks at the controversial programs that would never be made these days.

After seeing resurfaced clips of 'unhinged' on the internet, Brits were shocked

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 11, 2023
After old clips of a Sky docuseries appeared on social media, people were left stunned. Fat Families was the nation's most famous health documentary - hypnotherapist Steve Miller told overweight people that they'd shed the pounds. From 6 January to December 30, 2010, the documentary reality show on Sky1 aired from 6 January to December 30, 2010, but only lasted 11 months - from January 6 to December 30, 2010. It details Miller's day-to-day interactions with overweight families who want to change their lives by changing their diet and lifestyle. Every episode featured so-called 'weight loss specialist' and 'former fatty' Miller's chat to the family, who would later reveal their diets to him.

Ex-health Minister Ed Miliband has urged the government to take action' on the £14 billion-per-year obesity epidemic

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 18, 2023
Ministers have'squandered substantial federal funding,' according to Lord Bethell, who worked in the Department of Health and Social Care during the Covid pandemic, who slammed the 'unconservative' strategy. Policymakers should encourage Brits to live healthier lifestyles rather than defending vested interests,' he said. His remarks came as a result of a landmark report that revealed that billions of pounds are being stripped from the cash-trapped NHS each year. According to the diagram, twice as much money is spent on obese patients as on those of a healthy weight.