Biggest Loser
The charismatic trainer Dolvett Quince joins The Biggest Loser this season, bringing years of expertise in, in his words, "body sculpting." He keeps his clientele in shape and works with some to transform their bodies (one client lost 325 pounds) as founder of Atlanta, GA-based Body Sculptor fitness studios. In preparation for this season of BL, I had the chance to chat with Dolvett about fitness, training Atlanta's celebs (Justin Beiber even brought him on tour), and his advice for the rest of us.
Cheryl: What is the number one mistake people make when starting a training program?
Dolvett: Getting started without stretching.
Cheryl: What do you say to someone who thinks they are too out of shape to start exercising?
Dolvett: How much more out of shape are you gonna get before you get started?
Cheryl: You own your own successful fitness studios and have trained everyone from Justin Beiber to Janet Jackson. Of your accomplishments as a trainer, which are you most proud of?
Dolvett: I'd have to say making it here on Biggest Loser, I can affect more people, and help change lives.
Anna Kournikova, who has been a guest on the Ranch in the past, joins The Biggest Loser as a full-time trainer this season, bring her own sort of fire and intensity and a whole new energy. Kournikova has had a tennis racket in her hands since the age of five, and, as the daughter of two athletes, grew up training hard, pounding backhands in her native Moscow, and made a splash on the international tennis circuit while still in her teens.
I met with Anna at the start of season 12 to discuss The Biggest Loser approach to food and nutrition and had the chance to ask her a little a bit about her career and what she would do to motivate the contestants this season.
What’s the greatest adversity you’ve faced and how did you overcome it?
Anna: Having significant injuries as a professional athlete and finding creative ways to still workout and train.
What do you think you can do to inspire others?
Anna: The most important thing I can do to inspire others is to tell them to dream big! Growing up in the Soviet Union I was a small girl with very modest means but I had big dreams of becoming a professional tennis player. I can personally tell everyone that with a lot of hard work and dedication you can achieve things that you never thought were possible.
What would most surprise people about you?
Anna: I am a huge adrenaline junky and love to try all sorts of cool and exciting action sports.
How would you describe your tennis playing style, and, how if at all, do you think this relates to your approach to life?
Anna: I have always loved to be creative on the court, and sometimes it worked to my advantage and sometimes it didn’t. I was never a “play it safe” athlete; I always loved to take some risks. I think I approach life this way, too.
I am, overall, pretty regimented, which is a given having been a professional athlete, but I love to mix it up a bit and have some fun. I am a Gemini so it’s in my blood!

The Biggest Loser Season 11 may be over, but that doesn’t mean we are all going on vacation (and even if you are literally going on vacation, this is no time to let your diet slip). I’ll be posting the usual assortment of tips, reminders and recipes to keep you on the right track as always, so check back here each week.
In addition, I’ll also be giving away a year-long membership to The Biggest Loser Club every week! The Biggest Loser Club is an interactive nutrition and excises program that creates customized meal plan and daily exercises especially for you. To enter this week, leave a comment for me on Facebook telling me your ultimate weight-loss goal.
If you tuned in to The Biggest Loser finale last week, you saw Denise Hill win the at-home prize while Olivia became Season 11's Biggest Loser. Deni's food journal entries spoke volumes.
Successful weight loss requires dietary modification, cardio and weight bearing exercise, as well as addressing the psychological aspects of emotional eating (which affect most of us on some level).
Many of you have asked what the contestants eat to fuel their vigorous exercise and to help them achieve their weight loss success.
Today, I'd like to share Denise’s before-and-after food journal.
During this week's (3/29) episode of The Biggest Loser, BL Nutritionist Cheryl Forberg will be on hand to answer questions live on Twitter. Simply use the hashtag #askcheryl and ask whatever you'd like about the show, that week's episode, the contestants or food and nutrition in general.
For instance:


#AskCheryl on Twitter
Tues, 3/29, 8et/7c
Follow Cheryl @cherylforbergrd
I recently sat down with Curtis Stone to get to know a little more about this personable Aussie who not only serves as the chef for “The Biggest Loser” but who also stars in one of America’s most popular reality/cooking shows, “Take Home Chef.” Curtis, who trained in London under the legendary Marco Pierre White, is also author and presenter of the globally-successful cooking/lifestyle program, "Surfing the Menu.” His success in the U.S. has been phenomenal, with People Magazine naming him one of the sexiest men alive.
You certainly look quite fit Curtis - have you ever had a weight problem?
I don’t like to sit still for long at all which has probably helped me along the way and partly why I was drawn to the heat of a restaurant kitchen. The rush of service means that you are always on your toes and keeps a chef pretty active. These days I have to make more of a concerted effort to include exercise as part of my routine but I do try to do a little something on a regular basis as I always feel so much better when I am fit.
Sometimes, even when we have every intention to do so, things get in the way and prevent us from exercising. One of the most common is the winter weather. Besides it just being tougher to get out there in the cold there are serious safety concerns such as ice.
Snow and ice prevented one of the contestants on Biggest Loser this season from hitting their weight loss goals.
This got me researching ways to overcome winter obstacles. For running on ice and hard-packed snow Polar Cleats came highly recommended to me (in fact, Runner’s World found they were a top performer in tests). The cleats are mounted on recycled rubber (from old truck tires, I am told), and slip on easily and securely over running shoes or boots.
Polar Cleats has sent me a set of cleats which we’re giving away.
With all the rough weather across the country this winter, these will come in even more handy than ever for many of you. So, we want to know, what do you do to keep up your exercise regimen during winter? Tell us for a chance to win.
Share with us your best tip for exercising during the cold and snow. Post your tip to Cheryl's Facebook Page (or if you can keep it real short, share it on Twitter @cherylforbergRD) for a chance to win a set of Polar Cleats.
Follow Cheryl on Facebook and Twitter to see who wins.
A 15-ye
ar veteran of the health and wellness industry, fitness instructor and nationally-recognized personal trainer Brett Hoebel has helped shape-up some of Hollywood’s finest, including Victoria Secret supermodels, A-list actors, fashion designers and music icons. He was co-star of a reality fitness show on cable called “Fit Family,” and has made numerous appearances on talk shows like “The View,” “The Today Show” and “Good Morning America.” He has served as a contributing fitness expert for many publications, including Vogue, The New York Times, Elle, InStyle, Shape and Self. Brett is also certified in corrective holistic exercise kinesiology, kettle bell instruction, Olympic lifting and lifestyle coaching, Hatha Yoga instruction and prenatal and postpartum conditioning.
Recently I asked Brett a few questions about his background and motivations.
What led you to become a personal trainer?
After graduating pre-med from college, I became a lab-technician doing biomedical research while taking my MCATs and applying to medical school. On the small salary I was earning, I couldn’t afford a gym membership and decided to apply for a job as assistant boxing instructor at New York Sports Clubs in Manhattan, where I was living. I quickly found that teaching boxing -- and eventually kickboxing -- classes was the one thing I truly enjoyed and looked forward to every day. It was while I was working as a boxing/kickboxing instructor that I realized I could combine my medical background with my love of fitness and health. In the locker room one day, I ran into a group of trainers who were studying for an exam. They were stumped on a physics problem, which I helped them solve. Turns out, they were studying for their personal training certification. That changed my view of what a personal trainer was, i.e., a super buff guy who just counted reps. I was intrigued with the science aspect of personal training so, after switching from medicine to finance, I finally chose fitness as my full-time career and have never turned back.
A two-time Golden Gloves winner once ranked No. 2 in the nation by USA Boxing, Cara Castronuova is a certified trainer whose passion for her sport and being fit began early in her childhood. She and trainer Brett Hoebel join the Biggest Loser family this, our 11th, season.
Recently I asked Cara a few questions about her background and motivations.
What is your training/exercise philosophy?
My philosophy is to train hard and push yourself mentally and physically - and to know no limitations. Limitation is a word I have deleted from my vocabulary.
What led you to become a personal trainer?
My passion to help fight obesity.
How do you keep yourself up to date with the latest/greatest advances, techniques, research and trends in the fitness industry?
I love to take classes, work and collaborate with other trainers, and try new things out so I constantly evolve and get better.

Last week we talked about the importance of muscle in kicking up our metabolism. Here are more guidelines to get you moving in that direction.
Although aerobic exercise—things like running, bicycling, swimming, and dancing—are good workouts for your heart and lungs and help you lose weight, these aren’t going to help you maintain your strength. “The only type of exercise that prevents sarcopenia is resistance exercise,” says William Evans, PhD, a professor of geriatrics, physiology, and nutrition at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville who has studied how older people can address their muscle declines. (Sarcopenia, by the way, is the medical term for muscle loss.) Studies looking at athletes who have been running all their lives found that, though they’re leaner and have lower risk of chronic diseases, their strength is similar to sedentary people of the same age.
You have to use resistance exercise to maintain and build your muscle. Some people refer to this type of activity as lifting weights, and pumping dumbbells and barbells certainly works. But you can also use strength-training machines at the gym or stretchy elastic bands. For some exercises, such as abdominal crunches, you simply lift your own body weight. But what all these activities have in common is that they require you to push your muscles against a form of resistance.
To appreciably increase your muscle size and strength, Dr. Evans says, you can’t use weights that feel extremely light. Rather, you need to do exercises that incorporate at least 60 percent of the weight you can lift one time. In his studies, Dr. Evans typically has subjects lifting 80 percent of their maximum. Also, the weight you use should tire you out within eight to 12 repetitions. For example, if you can curl a 30-pound dumbbell once, you should aim for curling a 20-pound dumbbell up to 12 times. Curling a 10-pound dumbbell 20 times, by contrast, won’t build your muscle strength. Likewise, if you can curl a 20-pound dumbbell once, you’ll want to work on curling a 12-pound dumbbell up to 12 times.
If you’re worried about building bulk—don’t be. Few women actually gain significant muscle mass doing strength exercises, unless they’re genetically predisposed to it. Do check with a trainer or someone at your gym if you’re not certain of a safe starting weight.
Early in your resistance training, you’ll notice quick improvements, Dr. Evans says. In even just 2 months, your strength may double. This isn’t simply a matter of your muscles getting bigger—your brain learns how to use your muscles more efficiently, too.
But as you stick with it, your strength-training plan must be progressive. You have to add repetitions and use heavier weights (or thicker elastic bands). That’s because your muscles get stronger, so they can adapt to lifting a certain weight. After you curl that 12-pound dumbbell 12 times for several sessions, it ceases to be a challenge, and you stop gaining strength. So once you can lift a weight 12 times, it’s time to use a heavier weight and strive to lift it at least eight times.
Doing two sets of each exercise is a sufficient workout for your muscles, Dr. Evans says. That means you’d lift the weight—or stretch the band—a “set” of eight to 12 repetitions, then take a rest or do a different exercise, and then do another set.
Just two strength-training workouts a week, with exercises that work all your major muscle groups during each session, are adequate for building and maintaining your muscles. Your full-body workout would include exercises that focus on the fronts of your arms (biceps), backs of your arms (triceps), chest, shoulders, upper back, the fronts and backs of your thighs, your abdomen, and your lower back.
It’s beyond the scope of this blog to tell you everything you need to know about strength training. But here are some tips to keep in mind.
■ Talk to your doctor before beginning any new type of exercise program. Lifting weights may not be appropriate for people with certain conditions, such as high blood pressure or joint problems.
■ Strive for two strength-training workouts, each containing 10 or so exercises that give you a full-body workout. Do two sets of eight to 12 repetitions of each exercise.
■ Consider working at least one session with a qualified fitness professional. A certified personal trainer can help you design a program, teach you how to do exercises, and observe your form to ensure it’s correct.
■ Warm up for 5 to 10 minutes before a strength-training session and cool down afterward. Walking briskly and pumping your arms is a good warm-up.
■ You have a lot of options for how to train. According to Dr. Evans, a simple and economical approach is to use elastic bands or tubes. You can do many exercises by standing on one end and tugging on the other, standing in the middle and pulling both ends, or holding each end and pulling them apart. Free weights, like dumbbells and barbells, also improve balance and coordination, but you need a spotter to help you with some exercises. Weight machines tend to be a little safer and easier to use, he says.
■ When you increase the amount of weight you lift or the difficulty of the elastic band you stretch, make the challenge only 5 to 10 percent harder. This will limit your risk of injury.
■ Don’t do strength-training sessions for the same muscle groups on back-to-back days. Your muscles need more time to recover.
■ Work opposing muscles proportionally. That means working muscles on the fronts and backs of your upper arms, your upper back and chest, and your lower back and abdomen. Ignoring muscle groups throws your body out of balance.
■ Get plenty of protein. As you read earlier, the recommended daily allowance of protein for adults may not be enough to encourage sufficient muscle maintenance as you get older. Researchers haven’t pinned down exactly how much you should strive to get. If you aim for getting 30 percent of your calories from protein, however, you should get enough to support muscle maintenance and growth. Get most of your protein from low-fat sources, Dr. Evans recommends. Protein will be much more efficient at building muscle when you eat it within 30 minutes after a workout, he says. Have a turkey sandwich, some low-fat yogurt or cottage cheese, or nibble on some steamed edamame. Half a cup of these green immature soybeans contains a whopping 14 grams of protein.
What do muscle mass and strength have to do with how well we age?
After 30, your muscle mass dwindles some three to eight percent each decade. Once you hit 60, these losses accelerate even more quickly. The consequences are far more serious than a change in your appearance. Declining muscle mass doesn’t simply mean your shoulders are less toned or you can’t achieve the same results in sports that you did as a teenager. These muscle changes have implications that are much bigger than your new pant size. The effects are serious and far-reaching. They determine how healthy and active you’ll remain for the rest of your life.
Decreased muscle mass means you’ll burn far fewer calories. If you take in the same amount that you did when you were younger, you’ll start accumulating body fat. Your muscles require a lot of calories to maintain: Think of them as a bunch of high-strung, active family members visiting your home. They’re always up, moving around. As a result, they’re hungry and require a lot of food.
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Cheryl Forberg, RD, is a James Beard award-winning chef, a bestselling author and the former nutritionist for NBC's "The Biggest Loser." 