Really- how is this allowed on the air, especially when the comments he makes on the show about the cure (or “protocol”) specifically contradict the information in the book? He claims to have found a cure developed by a British MD medical doctor and states the info in the book can be done easily at home, by anyone, and has a near 100% success rate. You do the “protocol” for 4-6 weeks, lose on average a pound a day, eat anything you want, no exercise necessary, always feel full, and then miraculously, after six weeks you have lost 40 pounds, and then after that, the weight never comes back, you can eat anything you want and always feel full. Something to do with “resetting” the hypothalmus (?) gland?
And not only do you lose the weight and never gain it back, the cure also reshapers your body, moving those love handles to other parts of the body that could use some weight. Ok, that’s what he says on the infomercial. But if you buy the book, you will see that the “so easy you can do at home” cure involved daily colonics, frequent professional full body massages, daily time in an infrared (??) steambath, and no, you can’t eat everything you want. How do I know what the book really says- someone posted a review about it on Amazon, which when I tried to link, it WAS REMOVED!! Why the hell would Amazon do this? Is KT giving them a cut of sales? What gives?
I understand how you can market any crazy weight loss cure, OK, but how can you make claims on TV that contradict the book you are selling?
And don’t get me started on “Donald Barrett”, the founder of “ITV”, the infomerical host/sycophant who heartily agrees with every ridiculous claim that Kev makes.