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Læs mere Weight Loss And ...
Your go-to hangout for everything weight loss… and beyond! “Weight Loss and…” is brought to you by the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) and hosted by seasoned experts in weight management, Dr. James Hill and Dr. Holly Wyatt. We’re your friendly guides through the maze of weight loss, but with a fun twist. We’re not here to preach the latest fad diet or promise a miracle workout. Instead, we’re all about embracing the journey, acknowledging there’s more than one way to hit your health goals, and having a good laugh while we’re at it. We get it: weight loss can be tough, and sometimes pretty serious business. But why can’t it also be enjoyable? With a side of humor, we’ll bring you science-backed insights, real-life stories, and some hard truths. (Spoiler alert: there’s no magic answer - but that doesn’t mean we can’t find what works best for you.) “Weight Loss and…” is your inclusive space to explore, question, and learn — and to feel part of a community along the way. This isn’t just about shedding pounds. It’s about gaining perspective, building better habits, and enjoying the ride. So if you’re up for honest conversations about weight loss - spiced with a little science and a whole lot of fun - pull up a chair, plug in those earbuds, and let’s see where this journey takes us.
124 episoder
Exercise Isn't What You Think It Is Anymore with Renee Rogers
For decades, the message has been simple: if you want to lose weight, you need to exercise more. But what happens when a medication can do the heavy lifting for you? GLP-1 drugs are reshaping everything we thought we knew about weight loss, and that means the role of exercise is changing, too. Not disappearing. Changing. Join Holly and Jim as they sit down with Dr. Renee Rogers, senior scientist at the University of Kansas Medical Center and expert in biobehavioral lifestyle interventions, to explore this new frontier. If you've ever struggled to stick with exercise, felt guilty for not doing enough, or wondered whether movement even matters now that medications like Ozempic and Wegovy exist, this conversation was made for you. The answer isn't what you'd expect. Exercise isn't less important in the age of GLP-1s. It's more important just for entirely different reasons. Discussed on the episode: * The one word that could completely transform your relationship with exercise * Why losing muscle during weight loss isn't always the crisis people think it is (but also why you shouldn't ignore it) * The surprising link between fatigue on GLP-1 medications and physical activity levels * Why cardio vs. strength training is the wrong question to ask (and what to ask instead) * The exercise myth Dr. Rogers would delete from the internet forever * How the timing of your GLP-1 dose might affect when you should work out * What to focus on after you've hit your goal weight
Why Your Body Fights After Weight Loss with Rudy Leibel
You hit your goal weight. Then, hunger crept back in, your energy dropped, and the scale rose. Sound familiar? You're not broken, your body is built for this. In this episode, Holly and Jim sit down with Dr. Rudy Leibel, one of the most influential obesity researchers in history, a Columbia University scientist whose team cloned the leptin gene and fundamentally changed the world's understanding of obesity. What was once dismissed as a willpower problem, Dr. Leibel helped prove is a deeply biological one. And his groundbreaking work laid the foundation for the very GLP-1 medications making headlines today. If you've ever felt like your body is working against you, this episode will explain how your body’s biology impacts weight, share practical strategies for managing it, and offer real reasons for optimism about what's coming next. Discussed on the episode: * The evolutionary reason your body panics the moment you start losing weight * Why the biological drive to regain never truly lets up, and what successful "maintainers" are actually doing differently * The surprising reason metabolic adaptation may not predict who regains weight * What "threshold" vs. "set point" means for your biology and why the distinction matters * Why GLP-1 medications are more like aspirin for a fever than a true fix for the underlying biology * The next frontier in obesity treatment that the pharmaceutical industry hasn't fully tackled yet * What yo-yo dieting on a GLP-1 could mean for your body, and when it becomes a real concern. * The honest answer to: "Do I have to be on semaglutide forever?" * At what age does obesity risk "lock in" for kids, and what should parents actually do about it * Whether there will ever be a single solution to obesity (Dr. Leibel doesn't hold back) * What Dr. Leibel is doing with the next decade of his career, and why it involves growing brain cells in a dish
The Evolutionary Truth Behind Why Exercise Feels So Hard with Daniel Lieberman
You've probably told yourself the story before: "I'm just lazy. I should want to exercise. Something must be wrong with me." But what if science says you're not lazy at all? What if avoiding the treadmill is one of the most deeply human things you can do? This week, Holly and Jim are joined by Dr. Daniel Lieberman, professor of human evolutionary biology at Harvard University and author of The Story of the Human Body and Exercised. Dan has spent his career studying why humans move the way we do — and more importantly, why we so often don't. His research with hunter-gatherers around the world has turned some of our most cherished fitness beliefs completely upside down. If you've ever felt guilty for skipping the gym, this episode will change how you see yourself. From the real reason modern exercise feels so unnatural, to what GLP-1 medications are quietly doing to your muscles, to why "no pain, no gain" might be the worst advice in fitness history, this conversation goes deep into the evolutionary science of movement and what it actually takes to build a life where physical activity sticks. Discussed on the episode: * The surprising reason no animal on earth exercises except humans (and why that matters for your motivation) * Why hunter-gatherers sit just as much as we do, but avoid the health consequences we don't * The real difference between losing weight with exercise and keeping it off, and why the dosage is not the same * What a study of people running a marathon every day across the United States revealed about behavioral compensation * The GLP-1 muscle problem no one is talking about, and why exercise may be the only real fix * Why the treadmill was literally invented as a punishment device (and what that tells us about modern fitness culture) * The running form insight that could protect your knees and why your cushioned shoes may not be helping the way you think * What evolution says about the "best" type of exercise for weight management
The Making of the 2025 Dietary Guidelines and What They Mean for You with Christopher Gardner
Every five years, the U.S. government releases dietary guidelines that shape what gets served in school cafeterias, what doctors recommend to patients, and what ends up on your plate. But what actually happens behind the scenes, and who really gets the final say? If you've ever felt confused about protein, carbs, red meat, or dairy, you're not alone. The latest 2025–2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans arrived with controversy baked in, with final recommendations that diverged from what the scientific advisory committee actually concluded after two years of rigorous, volunteer-driven research. The result? A lot of frustrated scientists and the public left sorting through mixed messages. Join Holly and Jim as they sit down with Dr. Christopher Gardner, Professor of Medicine at Stanford University and Director of Nutrition Studies at the Stanford Prevention Research Center. Dr. Gardner served on the 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, giving him a front-row seat to both the science and the politics of how America's nutrition advice gets made. His research has shaped how we think about plant-based eating, diet quality, and what actually works for weight management in the real world. This one gets spicy. Discussed on the episode: * The surprising reason why it's nearly impossible to pick Dietary Guidelines Committee members who have zero conflicts of interest * What 1,000 hours of unpaid volunteer work look like, and what happened when the new administration received the finished report * The specific recommendation that left nutrition professionals across the board scratching their heads * Why the protein aisle at your grocery store may be misleading you and what the data actually shows about how much protein Americans eat * The little-known food group that Dr. Gardner says wins on protein, fiber, AND antioxidants simultaneously. * Why the "upside-down pyramid" may be more sensationalist than scientific * The real reason dietary guidelines have "failed" and why it's not the reason most people think * What Google's free employee cafeteria has to do with fixing America's food system * Dr. Gardner's unconventional answer to what comfort food means to him
True, False, or It's Complicated: The Weight Loss Myth-Busting Game
Everything you think you know about weight loss might be wrong, and that's actually great news. From "my metabolism is broken" to "I just need more willpower," the weight loss world is full of statements that sound completely reasonable, get repeated constantly, and quietly keep people stuck. The problem isn't that people aren't trying hard enough. It's that they're working from a playbook full of myths, half-truths, and oversimplifications. Join Holly and Jim as they turn the podcast into a game, throwing out the statements they hear most often in the clinic, on social media, and out in the real world, and putting each one to the test: true, false, or it's complicated? Play along at home and see how your answers stack up against two scientists with decades of combined research experience. You might be surprised where you agree and where the science has a very different story to tell. Discussed on the episode: * The metabolism myth that makes people feel helpless and the simple fix that actually works * Why feeling hungry doesn't always mean what you think it means (and when a little hunger might actually be a good sign) * The truth about GLP-1 medications: what they genuinely fix, what they don't, and the question researchers still can't answer * How your environment is quietly controlling how much you eat, even when you think you're in charge * The one thing decades of research agree willpower cannot do on its own * Why Holly and Jim actually disagree on whether you can out-exercise a bad diet * The scale question that trips up almost everyone, and the time frame that actually matters * Why keeping weight off isn't easier after you lose it, but it doesn't have to be as hard as you think. * The persistent myth that there's one perfect plan out there waiting for you, and what to look for instead
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