Rosie O’Donnell There are some choices for previous late night hosts Jay Leno After watching Netflix documentary Suitable for TV: The reality of the biggest loser.
“Jay Leno is a mean hole #biggestloserdocumentary,” O’Donnell, 63, subtitle Tuesday, August 19, shared photos of former biggest loser contestant Tracey Yukich From the newly released series.
O’Donnell seems to refer to part of the documentary. Tonight Show with Jay Leno After she showed up The biggest loser Season 8 of 2009. Leno, 75, read Yukich’s death threats live on the show.
US Weekly Has contacted Leno’s team for comment.
Suitable for TV: The reality of the biggest loser Always headline news As it premiered on Friday, August 15 via Netflix. The biggest loser.
The biggest loser From 2004 to 2016, it aired 17 seasons on NBC. The show aired in the last season of 2020, and it aired on the American Network.
In addition to her experience Show tonightYukich also claimed that she was almost “death” for the first time The biggest loser The challenge, which required her to run a mile on the beach.
“In my mind, I thought, ‘I can run, have four kids,'” she said. “‘I’ve been following them all the time.’ But it’s the longest mile ever.”
After the challenge, Yukich experienced a medical emergency.
“I don’t remember much,” she added. “I remember hearing the helicopter. I just felt like I was floating. Then my grandpa was there. Then I saw the darkness. But then I saw the light. So I know, I know I died that day.”
Yukich claimed her body began to “close”. She was later diagnosed with rhabdomyolysis, a rare and life-threatening disease in which muscles began to collapse after excessive exercise. According to Cleveland Clinic.
“It started with my liver, then in my kidney, and then in your heart,” she recalled. “That was where I almost died.”
The doctor of the show Robert Huizenga Recalling the conversation about bringing Yukich home after the experience, she felt “very angry” at the possibility of leaving.
“I felt like my weight and everything kept disappointing me,” Yukich said. “I wanted to change my life, and at the time I did feel that was my only hope.”
Yukich started the series with a weight of 250 pounds and weighed 132 pounds.

Senior News Analyst & National Affairs Writer
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