Duff Goldman spent several weeks traveling across America, eating lots of sweet treats for his show, Sugar High. With all the cookies, pies, bread pudding and donuts he was eating, the Ace of Cakes gained 30 pounds.
"I was literally eating dessert all day, every day, for seven weeks straight. I was doing nothing but traveling and eating crap," Goldman said. "Nonstop eating garbage over and over and over and over for the camera. And there are ways to do that, to make sure the camera gets the shot you need. But my problem is: I would eat when the cameras were off, too. It was what I love most in the world. Butter and sugar and fat and pork."
Goldman has since lost more than the 30 pounds he gained on Sugar High, thanks to his new diet and workout regimen.
"This is a journey that I've only been on for a little while.
"I was literally eating dessert all day, every day, for seven weeks straight. I was doing nothing but traveling and eating crap," Goldman said. "Nonstop eating garbage over and over and over and over for the camera. And there are ways to do that, to make sure the camera gets the shot you need. But my problem is: I would eat when the cameras were off, too. It was what I love most in the world. Butter and sugar and fat and pork."
Goldman has since lost more than the 30 pounds he gained on Sugar High, thanks to his new diet and workout regimen.
"This is a journey that I've only been on for a little while.
- 7/4/2012
- by rnazarali
- Foodista
There are currently two major entertainment destinations especially made for individuals looking to consume food-oriented programming. Food Network and Cooking Channel (and that doesn’t include Bravo, which you kinda sorta should include because Top Chef has won a few Emmys, but also kinda sorta shouldn’t include because it airs things like Shahs of Sunset). Ben Silverman just created a third. The founder and CEO of next generation multimedia studio Electus (and former co-chairman of NBC Entertainment and ex-ceo of Reveille) today announced the initial talent and programming line-up for Hungry, its gastro-centric YouTube channel (which is part of the video-sharing site’s $100 million Originals Initiative) led by individuals with serious experience in show business and the kitchen. Hungry is helmed by CEO Bruce Siedel (who Silverman and company poached earlier this year from his Senior Vice President of Programming and Special Productions position at Food Network and Cooking Channel,...
- 5/16/2012
- by Joshua Cohen
- Tubefilter.com
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