Jessica Alba admits in an interview with Seventeen magazine she’s more sensible about staying fit. “I used to be crazy, taking protein powders and eating high-protein, low-carb stuff – all that (stuff) – but that was when I was training for ‘Dark Angel,’ and I had to keep a certain amount of muscle on,” she said. “I don’t have to anymore. Now I can have flabby arms and legs, and it doesn’t matter!”
William Petersen has rid his bad habits during the summer hiatus of his hit CBS series, “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.” Instead of adding flab during the summer, Petersen has invested in a home gym and hired a personal trainer, janetcharltonshollywood.com reported. The trainer works with Petersen twice a week and helps police his diet.
Simon Cowell spends hours soaking in a “Fountain of Youth” concoction, according to the National Enquirer. The “American Idol” judge calls his creation, “Tomate Cerise,” made from Italian cherry tomatoes that are smashed to a pulp in a big bucket and poured into a bathtub filled with Perrier water. Cowell claims the tomato enzymes not only eradicate age spots and keep the skin looking young – they also increase his metabolism. His housekeepers aren’t happy cleaning his tub, a source said, claiming they call the mess “tomato soup.”
A weight-loss advertiser is suing Howard Stern, claiming the shock jock trashed his product on his radio program. Kelly Lockwood, CEO of JEC Nutrition, told the New York Post he spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to promote his fat-burning I57 Ignite on Stern’s Sirius radio show. Lee “Crazy Cabbie” Mroszak claimed on the June 6 show he dropped 20 pounds on the product. Stern and his sidekick Ralph Circella chastised Mroszak, telling him, “Why don’t you lose 60 more pounds and then come back?” claimed Lockwood, who plans to file a $100 million lawsuit against Stern. “This was horrendous for us. Our sales have dropped more than 20 percent. In seven minutes, he undid all the good work we did.”
People compiled by Greg Henry from wire and Internet reports



