Entertainment
“Enough”: Oprah Winfrey on her weight-loss lessons
Our first question to Oprah Winfrey: “You always wear really beautiful clothes. Always have. And I wonder if it’s a joy to get dressed now?”
“I can tell you what a joy it is to actually pack clothes that you know are gonna fit and you’re gonna feel good in them,” Winfrey replied. “I mean, it is a joy to get dressed. That is such a powerful first question, Jane Pauley, really!”
Powerful is one of the superlatives befitting Oprah Winfrey, one of the best-known and most-admired people on the planet, and one of the richest. But for all her success, she seemed powerless against a weight problem, a deeply personal struggle she has waged publicly and openly.
In 1985, when her talk show, “AM Chicago,” was getting national attention, Oprah appeared on “The Tonight Show” with guest host Joan Rivers.
“And I’m sitting there, and we’re toward the end of the interview, and Joan turns to me and, ‘So, tell me, you know, how’d you gain the weight?'” Oprah recalled. Her response? “I ate a lot.”
“I was stunned in that moment, when I look back and I see that moment. But I left feeling humiliated and embarrassed, but not the least bit anger, not the least bit of anger or being upset about it,” she said.
Why? “Because I thought, ‘She’s right.'”
CBS News
Over the next 40 years, Oprah would gain and lose hundreds of pounds. In the fall of 1988, after a strict four-month liquid diet, a new svelte Oprah appeared wearing size 10 Calvins, weighing 145, and pulling a wagon with 67 pounds of animal fat
It was all back, plus 25 more, when she went to the Daytime Emmy Awards four years later. “And I go to the Emmys praying not to win, literally praying not to win, because I don’t want to have to get up out of my seat and have everybody watch me do that walk to the stage,” she said.
She started over again the next day, working out with an on-call personal trainer this time. In 1994 she even ran a marathon.
Oprah knew how to lose weight … she did it over and over. She says her body was seeking a range of 211 to 218. “So usually, by the time I would hit 211 when I first went on the diet for the wagon of fat and pulled out the wagon of fat, when I did my first marathon, once I get to 211, I go, ‘Oh, I gotta do something.’ But now I understand that the biology of me, which is different than the biology of you and everybody else – every body, all of us, has our own – but no matter what I did, no matter how hard I worked, no matter what, it was always trying to get my body back to 211.”
Not because 211 is her ideal weight, but rather a “set point”: a genetically-influenced weight range. Oprah calls it the “enough point.”
“Enough” is also the title of a new book she co-wrote with Dr. Ania Jastreboff from the Yale School of Medicine, who says, for most people, an enough point is “the weight that they kind of always gravitate to.”
So, to lose weight, you cut back on calories, and start craving high-fat food , or you eat less – but nothing changes. “Our body’s like, ‘Well, if you’re gonna eat less, then I’m gonna make you more efficient. I’m gonna make you burn less,'” said Jastreboff. “So what happens is, together, collectively, we end up eating more, and burning less.”
“It’s the enemy within, which is in our brains,” I said. “So, now that we know what the problem is, the hormones that drive people, why don’t people just stop obeying it?”
“That would be like trying to control something that is not in your control,” Jastreboff said. “That would be like holding your breath for the rest of your life. Every time somebody says, ‘Just eat less, move more,’ we’re asking our patients to control their biology and hold their breath. And it’s just not possible. And why would we do that? We don’t do that for any other disease.”
And that’s what the American Medical Association says obesity is — a disease. A treatable disease. But the good news is that, if it’s a disease, it’s not your fault.
“It’s not my fault, Jane! It’s not my fault,” Oprah said. “And I could weep right now, could weep right now. I’m not going to! But I could weep right now for all of the many days and nights I journaled about this being my fault, and why can’t I conquer this thing?”
In the last decade, nearly a dozen weight management drugs have been approved for chronic weight management. And for millions, drugs like GLP–1s are the answer to their prayers. Finally, a scientifically-supported, medically-approved weight-loss strategy that worked. And yet, Oprah resisted. “I was so motivated by shame that I felt I could not take the drug,” she said, “because if I took the drug – I, who had been the poster child for I can do it, I can do it, I can do it, willpower, willpower, let’s just get more willpower – if I couldn’t do it, then I would be shamed, and ashamed of myself for not being able to do it myself.”
The medications don’t work for everyone, and some can’t tolerate side effects ranging from nausea to gallstones. But it’s been two years since Oprah finally started medication, and it’s working for her. She says she is now down to her marathon weight of 155. “And so, that’s it for me. I’m gonna just try to maintain,” she said.
“Well done. Because I thought 160 was your goal weight?” I asked.
“Yeah, yeah, it was,” Oprah said, “but as I continue to work out here the combination of the medication and hiking every day and resistance training has given me the body that I had when I was running a marathon. So, I was 40 and feeling really good, but to be able to be 71 and feel that I am in the best shape of my life feels better than it did when I was 40.”
“I would submit that you would have been a phenomenal success, but I don’t think you would have become ‘Oprah’ if you hadn’t had the weight issue and been open about it and shared it,” I said.
“Yeah. I would agree with that,” she said. “And that’s why I don’t have any regrets about it. There’s a wonderful spiritual, African American spiritual, called, ‘I Wouldn’t Take Nothing For My Journey Now.’
I wouldn’t take nothing for my journey now
for my journey now
for my journey now
I wouldn’t take nothing for my journey now.
“I wouldn’t change the journey,” she said. “because I think the struggle with the weight actually helped me be more relatable and relate more to other people who were in their own struggles. But I’m glad now to be in a position where I feel the healthiest and strongest I have ever been.”
READ AN EXCERPT: “Enough” by Dr. Ania Jastreboff and Oprah Winfrey
CBS News
“I feel free”
Oprah Winfrey grew up riding on dirt roads. Now, on her sprawling Montecito estate near Santa Barbara, California, she owns the road. She took me for a ride: “This used to belong to my neighbor,” Oprah said. “So, this is 23 acres. Her house used to be right there. We took this fence down, so this became my whole backyard, this.”
Around here, all of the views are spectacular, especially the one looking back.
Born in Mississippi in 1954, Oprah Winfrey was a teen beauty queen who became a local TV reporter in Nashville, and then an anchor in Baltimore. “The beautiful thing about my life was that I started out in local television, as you did,” Oprah said. “And when you start out locally, you get this, like, little teeny-tiny thing. But I failed. I failed in Baltimore.
“They brought me in as a 22-year-old with an anchor guy, white-haired Jerry Turner, who was the most popular local anchor in the country, not just Baltimore. And he totally hated me. He resented me. He would do everything he could to condescend to me any way. I remember one time we were on the set and he said to me, ‘So, you’re from Mississippi? Can you name all the tributaries of the Mississippi River?’
“And I was, like, ‘All the tributaries of the Mississippi River? No, I can’t.’ He goes, ‘Well, what school did you go to?’ ‘Well, I went to Tennessee State.’ ‘Was that an accredited school? So, you got a degree?’ I mean, that kind of thing. This is in-between the commercial breaks.”
“Boy, that happened to me in Chicago,” I said. “Started in September, basically was taken off the late news in the spring.”
Maybe we share a few things. I was a shy kid from Indiana who started as a local reporter in Indianapolis, and wound up on national TV – and Oprah was watching. “You were such an inspiration. I remember calling Gayle that morning, ‘Oh my God.’ It just, it was unbelievable.”
“Well, that I inspired you!”
But Oprah famously went on to build her worldwide media empire, and a following that some world leaders can only dream of.
I asked, “You have such power. Now that you are this woman undeterred by weight – ‘weight noise’ – what are you gonna do?”
“That’s a beautiful question, but I don’t feel compelled to do anything,” Oprah replied. “I don’t know what it means actually, other than I feel free.”
And what about her name being credibly bandied about for the presidency? “No, it’s not gonna happen,” she said. “What I really want to do is to continue to use who I am and what that represents as a force in the world, as a force for good, and to allow people to not let the noises of the world steal their joy.”
“You are such a person of positivity!”
“I am indeed,” she agreed.
For all of her astonishing success, it seems that Oprah is still always aware of how far she’s come – how she became something so much bigger than television. “I have to say, there’s a wonderful poem by Countee Cullen called ‘Yet Do I Marvel.’ And I would have to say, yet do I marvel at that, myself,” she said.
“Sometimes in the early spring, the frogs are in the pond, and I can open the door and I can hear the frogs out at night. And it sounds just like Mississippi, being on the porch in Mississippi. But the distance from Mississippi to Montecito cannot be measured. It just cannot be measured. And I marvel at, how did this happen? How did it happen that I was able to navigate the waters of racism and sexism and misogynism and all the things that we had to endure? Yet do I marvel!”
And marvelous, it is.
I said, “We have little bits of things in common, I’m happy to say. Little bits of things.”
“Yes. A lot,” Oprah said, “because we were women of this business at a time when it was really tough to be in this business. And now it’s become something else. It’s become something completely new.”
“But both. It was a time that was tough to be a woman in the beginning. But boy, was the timing good!”
“Boy, was the timing good! We made the best of it. Yes, we did.”
CBS News
For more info:
- “Enough: Your Health, Your Weight, and What It’s Like To Be Free” by Ania M. Jastreboff, M.D., Ph.D., and Oprah Winfrey (Avid Reader Press), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats, available January 13 via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org
- oprah.com
- Ania Jastreboff, M.D., Ph.D., Yale School of Medicine
Story produced by John D’Amelio. Editor: Remington Korper.
Entertainment
Sandra Bullock reportedly shares ‘natural chemistry’ with THIS star
After decades of car chases, crime thrillers and casino capers, John Travolta may finally be ready to trade the action hero life for something a little softer – and a lot flirtier.
Nearly 50 years after Grease turned him into Hollywood’s ultimate heartthrob, the 72-year-old star is reportedly hunting for the perfect romantic comedy comeback.
And according to insiders, there’s one woman at the top of the wish list: Sandra Bullock.
“John’s had such a long run in action and drama, that’s been his bread and butter,” a source told Closer magazine.
“But the truth is he’s actually more of a rom-com guy, those are the movies he loves watching, and he wants to try making one before it’s too late.”
Hollywood apparently agrees. While names like Jennifer Aniston, Julia Roberts and Meg Ryan have floated around, insiders claim Sandra is the “dream pick.”
And honestly? Danny Zuko flirting with the queen of rom-coms sounds like the kind of movie people would absolutely stream on a rainy Sunday.
“They haven’t worked together before, but they have a fantastic rapport, and people think they’d work really well as an on-screen couple,” the insider said. “Of course, people in his world are also secretly hoping that something more might spark between them once they start working together.”
The pair have crossed paths for years in Hollywood circles and famously shared a playful moment onstage at the Oscars. They also reportedly share mutual friends, including Nicole Kidman.
Behind the scenes, friends believe their connection goes deeper than Hollywood small talk. Both stars know devastating loss – John lost wife Kelly Preston in 2020 after her battle with breast cancer, while Sandra mourned longtime partner Brian Randall following his ALS battle.
“They share the same painful history of losing their soul mates far too soon,” the source said. “Sandra’s still grieving Brian intensely, and there’s no doubt John misses Kelly every day too.”
For now, there’s no romance – and maybe no rom-com yet either.
But insiders say if the right script lands on both their desks, Hollywood could get its next unexpected dream pairing.
Entertainment
Queen Camilla makes stunning confession in interview with Jenna Bush Hager
Queen Camilla sat down for a surprise interview with former US President George W Bush’s daughter, Jenna Bush Hager, who’s a renowned journalist.
The Queen, 78, made a stunning confession in chat with Jenna during her visit to the New York Public Library on Wednesday.
The conversation, recorded on day three of the King Chares and Camilla’s State Visit to America, focused on the Queen’s dedication to promoting literacy and her experiences during the trip.
The Queen reportedly spoke of her reading habbits, nature and personal choices during the chat.
NBC’s TODAY programme announced the interview on Instagram, stating: “In a TODAY exclusive, Jenna Bush Hager spoke to Her Majesty Queen Camilla about her visit to the U.S. and the Queen’s passion for reading.”
Vicki Perrin, who serves as Chief Executive Officer of the organisation, also accompanied the journalis at the library event.
The reception attracted impressive gathering of literary and cultural figures, with approximately 100 guests from the publishing world in attendance.
Among those present were Vogue editor Anna Wintour, author Harlan Coben, and actress Sarah Jessica Parker, herself a prominent advocate for reading initiatives.
Parker remarked: “Every time you shine a spotlight on reading and the relationship between a reader and a book and how it changes lives and enriches lives and cultivates empathy and curiosity, I’m so grateful.”
The Queen was all excited as she presented a special gift to the institution’s famous collection of Winnie the Pooh teddy bears, which originally belonged to author A.A. Milne’s son.
She donated a replacement Roo doll, crafted by British toymaker Merrythought, as the original character has been missing from the collection for some time.
Entertainment
US top commander to brief Trump on new military options against Iran, says report
- Possible strikes may focus on key Iranian infrastructure sites.
- Another plan involves securing Strait of Hormuz shipping route.
- Operation could include ground forces to reopen key oil passage.
President Donald Trump will receive a briefing on Thursday from the leader of the US Central Command, Brad Cooper, on new plans for potential military action against Iran, Axios reported on Wednesday.
The report cited unidentified sources. The White House and the US Central Command did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Centcom has prepared a plan for a “short and powerful” wave of strikes on Iran, likely including infrastructure targets, Axios reported, citing sources.
A fragile ceasefire in the Iran war began three weeks ago.
The war began when the US and Israel attacked Iran on February 28. Iran responded with its own strikes on Israel and the Gulf states with US bases. US-Israeli strikes on Iran and Israeli attacks in Lebanon have killed thousands and displaced millions.
Trump has previously threatened to destroy Iran’s civilian infrastructure. International law experts say such strikes may amount to war crimes. The 1949 Geneva Conventions on humanitarian conduct in war prohibit attacks on sites considered essential for civilians.
Another plan expected to be shared with Trump is focused on taking over part of the Strait of Hormuz to reopen it to commercial shipping, the report added, saying such an operation may involve ground forces.
The Iran war, which remains unpopular in the US, has shaken markets and raised oil prices. The war has brought traffic through the strait, a chokepoint for about 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas shipments, close to a standstill.
Washington hopes to make Iran more flexible at the negotiating table on nuclear issues, Axios reported.
Another option that might come up in the briefing is a special forces operation to secure Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium, Axios said.
Trump has cited Iran’s nuclear programme as an imminent threat. Tehran denies seeking nuclear weapons but says it has the right to develop nuclear technology for peaceful purposes, including enrichment, as a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Caine is also expected to attend Thursday’s briefing, Axios reported.
-
Business1 week agoUs-India Trade Talks: US–India trade deal: Where do talks stand & what to expect – explained – The Times of India
-
Business1 week agoUK inflation accelerates after Iran war drives sharp rise in fuel prices
-
Sports1 week agoPSL 11: Hyderabad Kingsmen opt to field after winning toss against Multan Sultans
-
Business1 week agoTrump administration in advanced talks for a rescue package for Spirit Airlines, source says
-
Tech1 week agoNation states responsible for ‘nationally significant’ cyber attacks against UK, says NCSC chief | Computer Weekly
-
Tech1 week agoMicrosoft faces court battle in £2bn Windows Server class action | Computer Weekly
-
Tech1 week agoBlackbox replaces two racks of HPE storage with 8U of Everpure | Computer Weekly
-
Fashion1 week agoBangladesh RMG units call for allowing local FOC raw material sourcing



