Hi there,i was wondering if you could help me? I was asked recently if i wished to be added to the paleolithic eating support list,and i said i would like to,as i follow this way of eating. I notice that i receive an awful lot of emails from people communicating with each other about the subject,and while i find it a very useful and helpfull service,i will unfortunately be working away for some length of time and will not be able to access my hot mail account. Therefore i was wondering if you could please tell me how i go about taking myself off the list? Thank you,and i am also very much looking forward to the BBC programme which should prove the doubters of high fat low carb diets wrong. Regards,mark >From: Keith Thomas <[log in to unmask]> >Reply-To: Paleolithic Eating Support List <[log in to unmask]> >To: [log in to unmask] >Subject: Palaeolithic diet programme for BBC television >Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2006 23:55:12 -0400 > >From the BBC website today: > >###### >TV show sets Kalahari challenge >A new BBC Three reality programme will find out if eight contestants can >live among the San >Bushmen of the Kalahari desert in a remote area of Namibia. >The show - which has the working title Man's First Diet - will be made by >Cheetah Television, the >factual arm of Big Brother producer Endemol UK. > >Four men and women will have to live as their African counterparts do - >hunting, foraging and >digging for food. > >BBC specialist factual commissioning editor Emma Swain described the >programme as an "original >and entertaining angle on diet". "Our Stone Age ancestors lived on the >hunter-gatherer diet, or >Palaeolithic diet - the only one that fits ideally into our genetic >make-up." > >Experts will closely monitor how the participants adapt to their new >lifestyle and environment. > >The Kalahari stretches into South Africa, Botswana and Namibia and is home >to millions of people. > >Last year the Botswanan government denied reports that bushmen living in >its part of the Kalahari >had been forcibly removed from their ancestral land. > >An Endemol spokesman said the programme would not ignore the fact that >theirs was a dying way >of life, but that it would not be its primary focus. > >Story from BBC NEWS: >http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/entertainment/5040352.stm > >Published: 2006/06/02 10:20:42 GMT >###### > >Keith >