They may say they just have good genes, but
you deserve to know: Many stars are jogging their butts off, and some
resort to unsafe, even illegal weight-loss practices, say insiders. “To
be fair, a lot of the top women are doing the right things: eating
healthy and exercising, but not obsessively,” says Beverly Hills
trainer Gunnar Peterson. “It’s the up-and-coming women who I often see
starving and going to crazy extremes.” Here’s the silly stuff they’re
doing — and the healthy, longer-lasting alternatives you should try
instead.They abuse laxative teas“The
big thing among teen actresses right now is dieter’s tea. It has a mild
laxative effect. But many young girls are abusing it — drinking 10 cups
a day. I knew one girl who ended up with long-term health problems.
Drinking too much of these teas can cause vomiting, stomach cramps,
chronic constipation or diarrhea. Not pretty! All that to lose a little
water weight.”The
healthier way: “Skip laxatives — the only weight you lose with them is
from waste. And it comes right back when you eat and drink again.” — Los Angeles nutritionist Carrie Wiatt, owner of Diet DesignsThey do superexpensive liquid cleanses“Once,
a very young
actress client of mine bought $3,000 worth of supplements
from her doctor to do a cleanse. All she was allowed to have for two
weeks were liquids and the vitamins she bought — no solid food. She was
already incredibly healthy — she worked out and ate really well, and I
don’t think she’d had a sip of alcohol in her life. She said she just
wanted to ‘clean herself out.’ I joked: ‘From what — apples?’ A week
into it she broke down, ate an entire loaf of bread and admitted that
her real goal had been to drop a few pounds. An actress friend of hers,
who has an eating disorder, had done the cleanse and recommended it.” — celebrity trainer Ashley BordenThe healthier way: Drinking plenty of water and eating well are all the ‘cleansing’ you need.They subsist on coffee & booze“One
client I had would stave off eating as long as she could — it was just
coffee, coffee, coffee all day. She’d have a practically zero-calorie
salad in the afternoon, skip dinner then go booze with her friends. Her
organs were so stressed that when we trained together, I could
literally hear her heart pounding away in her chest. Working out was a
waste because she was so exhausted.”The healthier way: “I always advise eating regular meals — a mix of healthy carbs, protein and fruits and veggies.” — Gunnar PetersonThey misuse diet pills“A
musician who’d been taking an over-the-counter fat blocker came to see
me. While on the drug, you can have bad side effects if you eat fatty
foods, but she kept eating creamy pastas, ribs, you name it. The
result: She had oily stools, bloating, gas and bad diarrhea, and she
was vitamin-depleted. But she didn’t want to change her eating habits,
and just kept taking it. Eventually she snapped out of it, followed a
healthy plan I gave her and lost weight.”The healthier way: “There really is no magic pill. Cut back on unhealthy fats on your own.” — Carrie WiattThey stay locked in the gym…“There’s
one singer-actress who works out at my gym for about five hours a day,
even on weekends. She spent her birthday here. She comes in at 5 A.M.,
then in the afternoon, and again at night.” — Amber Kenain, general manager at Crunch gym in Hollywood…and then lie about it“I
had one actress who trained with me and took six Spin classes a week.
And all she ate was lettuce and Swedish Fish. When the press asked her
how she’d ‘transformed’ her body, she said, ‘Oh, I do yoga and hike
with my puppy.’ That made me laugh. Don’t lie about how much you work
out, because other women are going to think, I walk my dog, why don’t I
look like that?” — Gunnar PetersonThe healthier way: Several hours of exercise a week is plenty. Several hours a day? Too much.