And another one bites the dust…
As reported on Junkfood Science, the company formerly known as LA Weight Loss Centers have shut the doors on its 400 corporate centers nationwide, citing “market conditions beyond our control.” 
According to JFS blogger extraordinaire Sandy Szwarc, U.S. Bankruptcy Court documents in Philadelphia reportedly show the company filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy on Friday, listing more than 100,000 creditors and with estimated liabilities at $10 million to $50 million. Annual revenues for the company had been reported as $44.9 million.
Szwarc goes on to give a brief background of the company’s extensive history in the courts, most notably that of civil lawsuits citing the company made false claims about its weight loss program. Both the states of Oregon and Washington also targeted the self-proclaimed diet mavens, charging the company with false and misleading representations of not only the program, but also its costs.
Before its closure, the company claimed that “The LA Weight Loss plan is not a diet — it’s a lifestyle change.” Sound familiar? Yeah, it’s the same drivel the diet company Weight Watchers is shilling, too.
Most recently diet book author Kevin Trudeau came under Federal Trade Commission crosshairs and diet-monger Heidi Diaz, founder of the much-aligned diet scam Kimkin’s, has also been in court to answer claims of false advertising.
LA Weight Loss Centers’ great fall is positive news, but I just can’t seem to muster the same degree of optimism as Szwarc in hearing the news. She writes:
There’s been an air of near desperation in the unparalelled intensity of weight loss marketing this diet season. Does the fall of the largest weight loss chain in the country portend a turning tide on the national dieting pasttime?
The national tide against dieting has turned, but so too has the diet industry. Like the aforementioned Weight Watchers, diet companies are now simply repackaging themselves not as the punitive, restrictive and largely ineffective regimes they really are, but as a “lifestyle change” with a focus on overall health and wellness - see stories here and here on the new trend in the marketing tactics of diet companies.
So, one diet company has fallen - hoorah - but hundreds more persist and new get-thin-quick plans spring up every day. Until we eradicate a disordered and poorly informed culture in which only a narrow weight definition of acceptable exists, the national tide against dieting will never fully turn.
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