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Mike Tyson speaks about weight in Super Bowl ad
Summary
Mike Tyson posted a 30-second Super Bowl ad, paid for by nonprofit MAHA Center, in which he describes past struggles with processed foods and severe weight gain. The article notes medical experts saying excess processed foods can increase risks such as high blood pressure and cardiovascular disease.
Content
Mike Tyson released a 30-second video ahead of Super Bowl LX in which he describes his past struggles with processed foods and significant weight gain. The ad was paid for by nonprofit MAHA Center Inc., an organization described as aligned with HHS messaging but not affiliated with the federal government. Tyson speaks about self-hate and says processed food "kills," and the video was reposted by the White House account. The article places the ad within a broader push by health officials to promote less processed food and a new dietary pyramid.
Key facts:
- Tyson posted the video on X and says he once weighed nearly 350 pounds and considered harming himself while describing an addiction to processed foods.
- The ad was paid for by MAHA Center Inc., which said the video launches a nationwide taxi ad campaign carrying the "Processed Food Kills" message alongside an image of Tyson.
- Obesity medicine specialist Dr. Holly F. Lofton is quoted saying eating processed foods in excess can contribute to high blood pressure, high triglycerides, high cholesterol and raise risks of cardiovascular disease, stroke, and obesity.
- The White House X account reposted the video, HHS and Agriculture officials have promoted limiting highly processed foods during a dietary pyramid rollout, and the ad ends with Tyson eating an apple and referencing RealFood.gov.
Summary:
Officials and organizers framed the spot as part of a public health push to discourage highly processed foods. The video is live online and is slated to appear in a nationwide taxi ad campaign; the White House reposting indicates the message will reach a broad audience. Undetermined at this time.
