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  #1   ^
Old Sat, Oct-04-03, 15:21
SummerYet's Avatar
SummerYet SummerYet is offline
Reinventing Myself
Posts: 11,768
 
Plan: Doctor's Plan
Stats: */*/* Female 5 ft 3 in
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Progress: 77%
Location: Scotch Plains, NJ
Default Enabling or Helping?

Saw this article and it raised a debate in my own mind...what do you think?

~Michelle

Catering to Obese Becoming Big Business
Sat Oct 4,12:52 PM ET Add Health - Reuters to My Yahoo!

By Jui Chakravorty

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Fast-food chains may be introducing more healthful menu items such as salads and major food manufacturers may be trimming portion sizes, but not everyone has joined the fight against obesity.

An increasing number of entrepreneurs have discovered there's big money to be made out of catering to Americans' bulging waistlines -- without seeking to trim them down.


It's big business.


Freedom Paradise, a 112-room resort south of Cancun, Mexico, bills itself as the world's first resort designed for obese people. Its amenities include large armless chairs, wide steps with railings in swimming pools, walk-in showers instead of bathtubs, stronger hammocks and a staff steeped in sensitivity training.


Nearly one-third of American adults are obese (a Body Mass Index of 30 or more), according to the Centers for Disease Control. In 2000, more than 300 million adults in the world were obese and 1 billion were overweight, according to the World Health Organization (news - web sites).


"We are no longer a niche market. Overweight people are the majority in this country," 324-pound Mindy Sommers said, referring to the 64 percent of Americans who are overweight. "Businesses that don't cater to us are stupid. There are a lot of us, and we have a lot of money to spend."


An expanding obese population is providing lots of demand for businesses that supply things that are plus-size -- from larger towels to larger beds, larger clothes to larger jewelry, larger furniture to larger coffins.


Amplestuff.com (http://www.amplestuff.com), an online retailer, sells nearly everything to the obese market, including seat belt extenders, larger umbrellas, larger clothing hangers, larger towels and weighing scales that can accommodate up to 1,000 pounds.


Kelly Bliss, who calls herself "the nation's leader in fitness for very large people," sells video tapes that feature workouts for the obese. All her tapes are geared toward larger people, with one that features a 500-pound woman doing workouts while sitting.


Bliss is also the creator of Plussizeyellowpages.com (http://plussizeyellowpages.com), a resource that lists a range of services for the larger population, from home furnishings to plus-size kayaks.


"Once I get the print version going, I will charge the companies listed," said Bliss, who plans to publish a paper version of the cyber yellow pages in about a year.


Businesses providing products for the larger population comprise a multibillion-dollar industry, said Gary Epstein, chief executive of Euro RSCG Tatham, a global communications group, which recently released a study on obesity.


Plus-size clothing alone brings in $17 billion a year.


Fatcities.com (http://fatcities.com), a Web-based company that sells a wide variety of items designed for the plus-size population, advertises a $999 couch designed to accommodate 550-pound users. It has wider and deeper dimensions than a regular couch, eight legs to support and balance the weight, and a firm foam seat to prevent sagging.


"A woman wrote to us and said that her 350-pound son sat on her patio furniture and it broke," said Graziella Ferrante, who owns Fatcities.com. She then contacted a furniture company and partnered with them to sell the innovative pieces.


"It was the first of its kind," said Ferrante.


The obese population has increased worldwide by 100 million between 1995 and 2000, according to the World Health Organization.


Batesville Casket Co., owned by Hillenbrand Industries, has seen nearly a 20 percent growth in sales of oversized caskets in the past five years, said Jo Weigel, director of communications for the company.

An oversized casket can cost double the amount of a regular casket at funeral homes, according to Dean Magliocca, owner of FuneralDepot.com (http://funeraldepot.com), the largest online casket provider.

"What we need is a solution to the obesity, but what we have is people feeding the problem to make money off the obese people," said Epstein of Euro RSCG Tatham. "Sadly, this is to be expected in a capitalistic economy."

"I don't look at it that way," said Ferrante of Fatcities.com. "The fact of the matter is that we're big, and we need the same things that thin people do."

Bliss, Sommers and Ferrante are going together to visit Freedom Paradise, the size-friendly Mexican resort, this month.

"I've tried to fight my self-consciousness and go to a beach for many years," said Sommers. "Now I can just go and have a good time."
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  #2   ^
Old Sun, Oct-05-03, 08:00
Angeline's Avatar
Angeline Angeline is offline
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Posts: 3,423
 
Plan: Atkins (loosely)
Stats: -/-/- Female 60
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Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Default

For those who watches the Simpsons, I just found a rag-on-a-stick
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  #3   ^
Old Sun, Oct-05-03, 08:27
FromVA FromVA is offline
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Posts: 632
 
Plan: DANDR
Stats: 191/153/145 Female 66.5
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Default

Obese people have real needs that should be met...as for "enabling", I don't think so, really, because the obese market was already out there. If overweight people let themselves get bigger because there is a source for clothes, furniture, etc., they probably would have put on the extra weight anyway. IMHO.
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Old Sun, Oct-05-03, 10:03
etoiles's Avatar
etoiles etoiles is offline
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Posts: 1,339
 
Plan: Vegetarian Atkins
Stats: 283/179/150 Female 68"
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Progress: 78%
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Default

I wouldnt say it is necessarily enabling. I was overweight my whole life and when there were hardly any clothes for overweight people I would still need clothes and it was very embarasssing having to hunt over and over for many stores, but that did not stop me from being overweight for years to come.
I do appreciate it now being able to buy clothes without looking in a tiny corner of the basement of a department store.

However, as to enabling I do see that slightly. it used to be 24 would be the largest size you could find in most stores. when I started getting past that size before I started low carbing I started panicking, what would I do when I could no longer buy clothes in a normal store, but the stores solved that problem now most go to size 28. I think that in a while I would not be surprised to see them to go 30 in a few years or 32.
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Old Sun, Oct-05-03, 10:31
LisaUK's Avatar
LisaUK LisaUK is offline
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Posts: 613
 
Plan: Atkins
Stats: 245/234/200
BF:don't care!!
Progress: 24%
Location: London, UK
Default

Perhaps it is enabling in a way but in reality, we all need those things! There will always be people who are more than happy to be 400 or 500lb plus and more than happy to stay that way so why should they have the same amenities that skinny people do?

Okay so I'm trying to lose weight but hell, I still want to go swimming/on holiday where I won't get stared at and called names.

I will NOT, however, be buying a rag on a stick.

If the urge to lose weight is there, then people will still lose it, no matter how many products make it 'easier' to be fat. For the ones who don't want to lose weight then they get to have fun too!
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