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Study Shows EVERYONE Eats 3 Extra Cheeseburgers A Day...

More Plates More Dates

More Plates More Dates

Health & Fitness, Science, Education, Self-improvement

4.9806 Ratings

🗓️ 2 June 2022

⏱️ 15 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Transcript

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0:00.0

What's up guys? Derek moreplacemoredates.com. Today we're going to be talking about how everybody

0:03.8

eats three extra cheeseburgers a day than they admit. So you thought that you've been telling

0:09.3

the truth about your diet and little did you know you were fucking lying this entire time

0:13.2

and you've been shoveling down cheeseburgers without even realizing it, bro. Like your alter

0:19.4

ego literally takes over and you slam down a couple Big Macs a day.

0:23.6

Is the title of this Science News publication?

0:29.5

It is the story.

0:31.6

Summary.

0:32.0

Everyone eats the equivalent of three extra cheeseburgers a day than they admit.

0:35.6

Regardless of their waistline.

0:37.2

So regardless if you're fat, if you're thin, whatever it is, everyone's fucking lying. Researchers. three extra cheeseburgers a day than they admit regardless of their waistline so regardless

0:37.7

if you're fat if you're thin whatever it is everyone's fucking lying researchers have revealed the

0:42.4

study shows obese and thin people all fib about food to the same amount regardless of the number

0:48.3

on the bathroom scale and this could be undermining national health advice so again this isn't actually about your shoveling down cheeseburgers without telling us.

0:58.1

But what you are doing, apparently, is eating the equivalent of three extra McDonald's

1:02.9

cheeseburgers a day in calorie amount, regardless if you're obese, if you're, you know,

1:07.4

fit, whatever it is.

1:09.0

Everyone does it apparently.

1:10.2

So this is the study in

1:11.3

question. It is obese individuals do not underreport dietary intake to a greater extent than

1:16.8

non-obese individuals when data are allometrically scaled. The aim of the study was to assess the

1:22.2

extent of misreporting in obese and non-obese adults on an absolute ratio scaled and allometrically scaled

...

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