

I could finally see what all the work was for. I took my shirt off, and I stood in the mirror and looked at myself.

Suddenly hit with a wave of melancholy, he reversed his mood by shaving his head. In other words, don’t try this at home, unless you have Foreman’s blessing and the constitution of a heavyweight champion.Įventually, even the ultra-determined Davis hit a wall, looking in the mirror incredulously as his pants tightened in ways he’d never before experienced. It feels like your eyes are going to burst out of your head. Instead, he barely got to chew, shoveling/forcing the food into his stomach and taking two hours to get through a plate of food, looking like a “chipmunk”. Davis didn’t exactly get to enjoy the prepared morsels as he gained 50 pounds in five weeks, getting up to 275 pounds. I wanted to do it all clean because I had to gain so much weight in such a quick amount of time, and I wanted it to go off as quickly as it came on.” “I did it on a pescatarian diet,” Davis told FanSided, regarding the caloric overload. Oh, and you have to pack on the pounds to truly become Big George, which involved precise training and a regimen we wouldn’t wish on our worst enemy. Take it from actor Khris Davis, who added an incomprehensible physical element to his one-of-a-kind acting challenge: go from portraying the iconic Biff Loman on Broadway (as the first black actor to do so) to becoming vaunted winner George Foreman seamlessly. While the number may sound comically absurd, rest assured that consuming 7,000 calories per day in order to transform into something you’re not is light years away from being a laughing matter.
