Couch potato  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 21:33, 16 April 2007
84.198.171.89 (Talk)

← Previous diff
Current revision
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

Line 1: Line 1:
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-A '''couch potato''' refers to a person who spends most of his/her free time sitting or lying on a [[couch]]. This [[stereotype]] often refers to [[Laziness|lazy]] and [[overweight]] men who watch a lot of [[television]], sometimes in their [[underwear]] and sometimes drinking [[beer]]. Generally speaking, the term refers to a lifestyle in which children or adults don't get enough physical activity. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Couch_potato]+A '''couch potato''' refers to a person who spends most of his/her free time sitting or lying on a [[couch]]. This [[stereotype]] often refers to [[Laziness|lazy]] and [[overweight]] men who watch a lot of [[television]], sometimes in their [[underwear]] and sometimes drinking [[beer]]. Generally speaking, the term refers to a lifestyle in which children or adults don't get enough physical activity.
 +==History==
 +The term ''couch potato'' was coined by a friend of underground comics artist [[Robert Armstrong]] in the 1970s; Armstrong featured a group of couch potatoes in a series of comics featuring [[sedentary]] characters and with Jack Mingo and Allan Dodge created a satirical organization that purported to watch television as a form of meditation. With two books and endless promotion through the 1980s, the Couch Potatoes appeared in hundreds of newspapers, magazines and broadcasts, spreading its "turn on, tune in, veg out" message, garnering 7,000 members, and popularizing the term.
 + 
 +The condition, which predates the term, is characterized by [[sitting]] or remaining inactive for most of the day with little or no exercise.
 + 
 +Lack of exercise causes [[muscle atrophy]], i.e. shrinking and weakening of the muscles and accordingly increases susceptibility to physical injury. Additionally, [[physical fitness]] is correlated with immune system function; a reduction in physical fitness is generally accompanied by a weakening of the immune system. A review in [[Nature Reviews Cardiology]] suggests that since illness or injury are associated with prolonged periods of enforced rest, such sedentariness has physiologically become linked to life-preserving metabolic and stress related responses such as [[inflammation]] that aid recovery during illness and injury but which due to being nonadaptive during health now lead to chronic diseases.
 + 
 +Despite the well-known benefits of physical activity, many adults and many children lead a relatively sedentary lifestyle and are not active enough to achieve these health benefits.
 + 
 +In the 2008 United States American National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) 36% of adults were considered inactive. 59% of adult respondents never participated in vigorous physical activity lasting more than 10 minutes per week.
 + 
 +==See also==
 +* [[Working time#9-to-5|9 to 5]]
 +* [[Active travel]]
 +* [[Exercise trends]]
 +* [[Simple living]]
 +* [[Workaholic]]
 +* [[Childhood inactivity and obesity in the United States]]
 +{{GFDL}}

Current revision

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

A couch potato refers to a person who spends most of his/her free time sitting or lying on a couch. This stereotype often refers to lazy and overweight men who watch a lot of television, sometimes in their underwear and sometimes drinking beer. Generally speaking, the term refers to a lifestyle in which children or adults don't get enough physical activity.

History

The term couch potato was coined by a friend of underground comics artist Robert Armstrong in the 1970s; Armstrong featured a group of couch potatoes in a series of comics featuring sedentary characters and with Jack Mingo and Allan Dodge created a satirical organization that purported to watch television as a form of meditation. With two books and endless promotion through the 1980s, the Couch Potatoes appeared in hundreds of newspapers, magazines and broadcasts, spreading its "turn on, tune in, veg out" message, garnering 7,000 members, and popularizing the term.

The condition, which predates the term, is characterized by sitting or remaining inactive for most of the day with little or no exercise.

Lack of exercise causes muscle atrophy, i.e. shrinking and weakening of the muscles and accordingly increases susceptibility to physical injury. Additionally, physical fitness is correlated with immune system function; a reduction in physical fitness is generally accompanied by a weakening of the immune system. A review in Nature Reviews Cardiology suggests that since illness or injury are associated with prolonged periods of enforced rest, such sedentariness has physiologically become linked to life-preserving metabolic and stress related responses such as inflammation that aid recovery during illness and injury but which due to being nonadaptive during health now lead to chronic diseases.

Despite the well-known benefits of physical activity, many adults and many children lead a relatively sedentary lifestyle and are not active enough to achieve these health benefits.

In the 2008 United States American National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) 36% of adults were considered inactive. 59% of adult respondents never participated in vigorous physical activity lasting more than 10 minutes per week.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Couch potato" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools