Biography ada wong biggest loser 2013
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One 'Loser' races from first place to last
After giving both Mark and Brendan the boot gods week, the remaining four “Biggest Loser” contestants were immediately sent home to begin the sista push before finale night.
That meant players had to face off-ranch challenges with diet and exercise, prepare for a pre-finale marathon, and with the help of emotion-packed highlight reels, reflect on just how far they’ve come.
One might think the personal clip show would be the easiest part by far. One would be wrong — at least where Ada was concerned.
Also watching Ada’s memorable moments of the season so far were her parents, otherwise known as the folks who blamed her for living when two of her brothers didn’t, and who famously refused to send so much as a video “hello” while she was away. There they sat, watching ranch-Ada retell her problems with them onscreen, while sofa-Ada wept nearby.
Awkward.
But, if made-for-TV professions of support -- not to mention Ada’s mother’s e
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Ada From The Biggest Loser Gives Us Awkward Cultural Family Moments on Reality Television
So I watch The Biggest Loser. Admittedly, inom watch The Biggest Loser while usually having a double slice combo pizza and a couple of candy bars, usually with a diet coke so inom dont feel as guilty. The past couple of seasons have been relatively repetitive: fat people cry, fat people vomit while crying, skinny trainers yell at them for good television, skinny shadows of fat people flex on-air, only for them to gain half the weight back after their show is off the air.
This season gives us Ada Wong, a Chinese American from the Bay Area who has given us some of the most awkward moments of reality television watching if youre an Asian American. Not because Ada started the show as an obese Asian girl and has lost large amounts of weight, but because she did something even more culturally taboo: reveal her family problems on national television.
Chinese people, you see, believe in publ
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Front of the Book
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November 7,