Chris Niedenthal, a Warsaw-based photographer, has taken to slathering his cheese with butter. When he’s thirsty, sometimes he g

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问题     Chris Niedenthal, a Warsaw-based photographer, has taken to slathering his cheese with butter. When he’s thirsty, sometimes he gulps down a nice tall glass of 30%-fat heavy cream. For breakfast he’ll have all the bacon and eggs he wants—but no toast. What is missing from his diet? Fruits, vegetables and all but 50 g of carbohydrates a day. "The best thing, really, is fried pork," he says.
    As sure as a yo-yo goes down, then right back up, there will always be new diets. There will always be people willing to offer glowing testimonials to add to the bottom line of the estimated $35 billion—in the U. S. alone—diet industry. Niedenthal says that not only has he lost 12 kg in 18 months on his counterintuitive diet regime, "I have much more energy and my complexion has improved. " As for his cholesterol levels, well, he hasn’t had them checked yet.
    The diet that Niedenthal follows, the "Optimal Nourishment" plan, was developed by a Pole named Jan Kwasniewski, a doctor whose books are sold on street corners. Optimal Nourishment also resembles a version of the extreme low-carbohydrate mania now sweeping the United States; rumor has it that television star Jennifer Aniston owes her new skinny frame to it. Several current best sellers including a new edition of the Diet Revolution by Dr. Robert C. Atkins of the 1970s and a new book called Sugar Busters ! by some very clever businessmen and a doctor.
    The idea behind Sugar Busters! is that anything that raises insulin levels, such as sugar, potatoes, corn, white rice, bread from refined flour, fresh fruits or milk, is bad for you. This notion originally came from the writings of France’s favorite diet writer, Michel Montignac. The French may have obesity levels of only around 8%,(three times lower than Americans,)but as their love of anti-cellulite creams reveals, they are not immune from a belief in the miracle cure, and Montignac has benefited handsomely. A former employee of a pharmaceutical firm, he has written 11 books which have sold 9 million copies in 28 countries, espousing the Montignac Method: consume those carbohydrates that reduce the glucose in the blood. "If you’re overweight it’s not that you eat too much but that you don’t eat well," Montignac says. "It’s complete nonsense today to say that in order to lose weight one has to do sports. "
    But perhaps not as nonsensical as some of the other weird stuff out there. In Britain there’s a new product called "X-Fat" that is derived from shellfish and allegedly keeps fat from being absorbed by the body. Some Germans have taken to drinking cider vinegar neat. And the truly desperate can always munch on Matricur, a sponge that, when swallowed, swells to 18 times its size and fills up the stomach. After about eight hours, the spongy protein ball, made of cow skin, is digested.
    Not surprisingly, all of this makes nutrition experts despair. "If those fads worked, there wouldn’t be a billion-dollar diet industry," says Bettye Travis, president of the board of directors of the U. S. National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance. "People would lose their excess weight and that would be it. " British dietician Lyndel Costain agrees. "As the slimming industry’s profits get bigger," she notes ominously, "so do our waistlines. "
Who will not support those different slimming diets according to the passage?

选项 A、The public figures like the film stars, television stars and sports stars.
B、The doctors such as Jan Kwasniewski and Robert C. Atkins.
C、The nutrition experts such as Bettye Travis and Lyndel Costain.
D、The writers like the diet writer Michel Montignac.

答案C

解析 根据本文内容,谁不会支持那些各种各样的减肥饮食疗法?[A]电影明星、电视明星、体育明星等公众人物。[B]简·克瓦斯尼夫斯基、罗伯特·C.阿特金斯这样的医生。[C]贝蒂·特拉维斯、林德·克斯坦这样的营养学专家。[D]米歇尔·蒙特泰纳这样的饮食疗法作家。题干问谁不会支持这些各种各样的减肥饮食疗法。通读全文,注意与所给的四个选项有关的信息。根据文章最后一段第一句:毫无疑问,这一切让营养学家大失所望。因此本题的正确答案为[C]。
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