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                  Oklahoma 
                City Mayor Puts City on a Diet
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                    | Carrie Snyder-Renfro 
                        talks with a reporter while working out in Oklahoma City, 
                        Thursday, Jan. 3, 2008. Mayor Mick Cornett wants residents 
                        to shed 1 million pounds in 2008 and end Oklahoma City's 
                        dubious distinction as one of America's fattest cities. 
                        (AP Photo) |  By 
                SEAN MURPHY  OKLAHOMA 
                CITY (AP) - With a button-popping spread of cornbread, 
                sausage and gravy, chicken fried steak and pecan pie designated 
                as Oklahoma's official state meal, it's no surprise that Oklahoma 
                City's mayor wants to put the city on a diet. Mick Cornett has 
                challenged the city to shed 1 million pounds as its New Year's 
                resolution.  Prompted in part by his own 
                struggle to lose weight, Cornett wants to end Oklahoma City's 
                dubious distinction as one of America's fattest cities.  "The message of this 
                obesity initiative is that we've got to watch what we eat," 
                Cornett said Thursday. "Exercise is part of it and the city 
                is trying to change into a city that is less sprawling, has more 
                density and is more pedestrian friendly, but you're not really 
                going to take on obesity unless you acknowledge that we eat too 
                much and don't eat the right foods."  As part of the initiative, 
                residents can sign up and track their weight loss on a new Web 
                site, . More than 2,600 people had registered by Thursday. They've 
                lost more than 300 pounds.http://www.thiscityisgoingonadiet.com 
                 Besides a body mass index 
                calculator, the site includes recipes and links to metro-area 
                fitness centers. Plans call for expanding the site to include 
                the opportunity to blog and network with other participants, Cornett 
                said.  "It's always easier if 
                you're doing something hard if you have other people to do it 
                with," he said.  The mayor timed the start 
                of the weight-loss program to the beginning of the new year, when 
                many people begin exercise programs after holiday feasts.  Oklahoma City ranked 15th 
                in a 2007 survey of America's fattest cities conducted by Men's 
                Fitness magazine. The survey examined lifestyle factors in each 
                city, including fast-food restaurants per capita and availability 
                of city parks, gyms and bike paths.  "I 
                can't tell you exactly where you rank in our 2008 survey, but 
                I can tell you that Oklahoma City is in the top 10," magazine 
                spokeswoman Jennifer Krosche said. "That's not good." 
                 
                
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                  | A 
                      man runs on a treadmill in Oklahoma City, Thursday, Jan. 
                      3, 2008. Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett wants residents 
                      to shed 1 million pounds in 2008 and end Oklahoma City's 
                      dubious distinction as one of America's fattest cities. 
                      (AP Photo) |  The Oklahoma 
                Legislature designated an official state meal in 1988. The menu 
                also includes fried okra, squash, barbecue pork, biscuits, grits, 
                corn, strawberries and black-eyed peas.
 Cornett, 49, stands about 
                5-foot-10 and weighs 183 pounds. He began a personal fitness initiative 
                eight months ago when he weighed 217 pounds.  "I would like to get 
                down to 175, so I've made a goal to lose 8 pounds over 8 weeks," 
                he said.  Carrie Snyder-Renfro, a 44-year-old 
                teacher working out at a fitness center Thursday, said she made 
                a resolution last month to eat healthier and exercise. While she 
                was unaware of the mayor's Web site, she said she would consider 
                signing up.  "Last year I dieted and 
                lost about 10 pounds a month for three months, but I left out 
                a key component," she said, huffing and puffing on an elliptical 
                machine. "I didn't exercise regularly. I ended up losing 
                muscle mass instead of fat, and I ended up gaining almost all 
                of it back.  "Now I'm making it more 
                of a priority to put everything in balance. I have to get the 
                eye of the tiger back."  Cornett wants to make exercise 
                more attractive to residents by increasing the number of bike 
                trails and sidewalks in the sprawling city, where public transportation 
                is minimal, most people are wedded to their cars and outdoor activities 
                for some might be limited to watching a football game.  "In Colorado, you ski, 
                you climb, you run ... something," said Karen Massey, community 
                nutrition coordinator at Integris Baptist Medical Center. "In 
                Oklahoma, we're either involved in competitive sports or we do 
                nothing. We're spectators."   |