Friday, October 16, 2009

the cookie diet

the cookie diet
Series of weight loss, Sanford Siegal told their patients to 30, is eating cookies. Kendall, in his kitchen, he fried up a 90-calorie concoction, which is more than crush the hunger-amino acids, and Cookie dough is kneaded. He swore that they never lose between 10 and 15 pounds per month to six meals a day - and a reasonable dinner.
After decades of refusing the national spotlight, the 80-year-old doctor has gone commercial. He's taking trips to Beverly Hills and catching up with the Kardashians. He's feuded with Madonna and done media blitzes on shows that don't really cater to his demographic. ``I'm flying to L.A. to do a segment for this show called Extra,'' Siegal said recently. ``It's one of those flashy shows.'' To those people, he is simply The Cookie Man. Although this moniker has given him wealth and prestige, he often wants people to remember that ``doctor'' is the title he is most proud of.
Siegal began his medical practice in the pre-Slim Fast Hialeah world in the 1950s, and soon discovered that most clients want advice on how to lose weight. Thus began the emphasis on obesity, drawing the conclusion that not only support physical activity and healthy diet is realistic. If customers want to eat, then yes.

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