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A weight loss doctor, who specializes in helping high performers, shares her favorite hack to eat healthy without tracking every bite

On a recent trip to France, Dr. Meghan Garcia-Webb was struck by an age-old paradox.

Everywhere she looked, she saw people enjoying cheese, wine, and bread — yet the average person seemed much healthier than the typical American.

In France, despite their reputation for rich cuisine, the obesity rate is a fraction of what we see in the United States, for all our calorie-counting and protein maxxing.

“There isn’t this pervasive diet culture of going to a restaurant and seeing how many calories are in this and how many carbs,” Garcia-Webb told Business Insider. “I do find it is refreshing in the sense that there’s not this fear around food, and the food is very satisfying.”

It’s just one example of how stressing less about your diet can lead to better weight loss and long-term health, she said.

In her concierge medicine practice, Garcia-Webb specializes in helping high achievers, such as CEOs and attorneys, manage their weight. A lot of her job is pushing back on extreme diet fads, including the trend of tracking everything.

“I really enjoy food and the more I do this work, the more compelled I feel to show people that it actually is possible to be healthy and really like to eat,” she said.

Garcia-Webb said her favorite food hack makes it easy to eat well without turning your food journal into a full-time job. Here’s how to try it at home for more nutritious meals.

A stress-free guide to healthy eating

Everyone loves a food hack, and Garcia-Webb said hers is simple: when you prepare a meal, start by making half the plate fruits and non-starchy vegetables.


A colorful salad with greens, nuts, peppers, and grilled chicken.

Filling half your plate with produce is a simple way to eat well without measuring each bite, calorie, or gram of protein.

Magda Tymczyj/Getty Images



“It’s actually very easy,” she said. “You don’t even have to cook them if you don’t want to.”

Think carrots, cucumbers, peppers, greens, tomatoes, berries, grapes, citrus — anything you’d find in the produce aisle (except potatoes). To make it even easier, opt for pre-cut options that are ready to eat or frozen produce, which is as healthy as fresh.

From there, Garcia-Webb builds a full meal by adding a source of protein, like lean meats or fish, to fill another quarter of the plate. The last quarter of the plate is for starchy foods like whole grains, pasta, rice, or potatoes.

The strategy makes it simple to get five servings a day of fruits and veggies. Each serving is about a handful when you’re eyeballing it.

As you fill up on produce, the high-volume, high-fiber food keeps you full and satisfied after eating, so you’re less likely to reach for junk food later. That means you’ll find yourself eating healthier without having to count a single calorie or even measure a portion.

When to track your food for weight loss

There’s nothing inherently wrong with tracking your eating habits, and calculating every gram of protein is fine if that works for you.

Still, for most people, too much tracking can be a burden, taking away the enjoyment of food and making you less likely to stick to your healthy habits long-term.

Instead of trying to track everything you eat forever, Garcia-Webb recommends keeping a food log for a few days: it can give you a baseline sense of your current habits and what you can change to move toward your goals.

“You build this intuitive knowledge, and then you have a rough sense of what it looks like for you,” she said.

A temporary habit of food tracking can be helpful if you feel like you’re doing everything right and wonder why you aren’t losing weight.


A woman in a grocery store comparing two cartons of dairy

Food labels can mislead you by making a processed snack seem healthy because of added protein, but sneaking in extra sugars.

Luke Chan/Getty Images



Garcia-Webb said if you’ve never tracked your habits, it’s common to eat more and exercise less than you realize.

These days, plenty of convenience foods disguise ultra-processed junk with a “health halo” of added protein or other nutrients to make you believe you’re making a nutritious choice.

“People think that they’re eating healthier than they are,” Garcia-Webb said. “Something that we can all fall prey to is very good marketing.”




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Taylor Swift’s latest business move is another attempt to hack the charts — and it’ll probably work

Taylor Swift is the biggest-selling artist in the world by most reliable measures, so when she makes an unconventional business move — no matter how random or trivial it may appear — it’s worth paying attention.

On Friday, Swift unveiled the self-directed music video for “Opalite,” her latest single from “The Life of a Showgirl.” Upon release, the cameo-laden clip was available exclusively on Spotify and Apple Music, with its YouTube premiere scheduled for a two-day delay.

Streamers like Spotify and Apple Music specialize in hosting songs, albums, podcasts, and playlists — not visual works. Meanwhile, YouTube is famously a destination for music video lovers. So what gives?

As usual, when it comes to Swift, the answer seems to lie with her bottom line. In December, YouTube announced it would withdraw its streaming data from Billboard’s chart formulas because the music company tweaked its methodology so that streams from YouTube subscribers were weighted even more heavily than free streams. YouTube’s stance is that the ratio is unfair to fans.

Swift recently scored her longest reign yet on the Billboard Hot 100 with “The Fate of Ophelia,” the lead single from “Showgirl,” which charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks. With “Opalite” officially serving as its follow-up, Swift appears to be making moves to boost the song’s chart performance.

If fans were flocking to YouTube today to watch her new music video, none of those views would help “Opalite” reach No. 1 — and nobody wants to follow a personal best with a personal flop, least of all an athlete-style competitor like Swift.

Of course, this savvy tweak to the song’s promo schedule was paired with a physical release: a seven-inch vinyl single in “pearlescent blue,” only available in Swift’s online store for 48 hours.

How Taylor Swift moves, other artists tend to follow

Swift’s unyielding commitment to commerce isn’t just something to behold. It’s something to study. Swift’s sales tactics often become instructive for other artists.

Much has been made about Swift’s push to sell physical albums, for example, but many fellow pop stars have followed suit. Charli XCX released about two dozen vinyl variants for her 2024 album “Brat” and its deluxe editions. Sabrina Carpenter, a self-professed disciple of Swift’s work, released 13 vinyl variants last year for “Man’s Best Friend,” in addition to seven-inch singles, cassettes, and CDs. As a result, “Man’s Best Friend” scored the ninth-biggest vinyl sales week of the modern era, according to Billboard. (Seven of the top eight slots on that list belong to albums by Swift.)


Taylor Swift in the music video for

“The Fate of Ophelia” reached No. 1 on the chart dated October 18, 2025.



Taylor Swift/YouTube



So, it could very well mean that Swift’s strategic video rollout will start a trend as well. Although YouTube is the customary platform for music videos, customs can be changed, and she isn’t the only artist who cares about climbing the charts.

It could also be that Swift’s premiere delay will inspire YouTube to rethink its attitude toward Billboard. If one of the most influential celebrities in the world is delaying their content to your product, that could be bad for business — and it wouldn’t be the first time Swift convinced a major company to change its tune. Back in 2015, she criticized Apple Music for refusing to pay artists during a new user’s free trial. Within 24 hours, Apple updated its policy and tagged Swift in the announcement online.

It remains to be seen whether “Opalite” will affect the music industry beyond Swifties, but if the song’s lyrics are any indication, Swift is content to manufacture success on her terms — or, in her words, to make her own sunshine.




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3 things homebuyers should do to hack the unaffordable housing market, according to Fannie Mae’s chief economist

Doug Duncan, chief economist of the government-sponsored mortgage finance giant, noted the challenging environment for first-time homebuyers, with mortgage rates hovering near 20-year highs and a dearth of inventory keeping home prices elevated.

The 30-year fixed mortgage rate has been stuck around 7% all year. Single-family home prices, meanwhile, climbed 7.4% in the first quarter.

“Supply-constrained,” Duncan said of the housing market, speaking to Yahoo Finance on Thursday. “That’s been a theme for several years, it’s kind of repeating the story, but it’s the story.”

Duncan outlined his top tips for homebuyers in today’s market:

1. Have a good credit score

Mortgage rates are elevated, and having a poor credit score makes borrowing costs even steeper, Duncan said.

“No matter who you talk to, there’s different kinds of lenders. All of them are going to look, first of all, at what’s your credit? Do you have a good credit score?” he said. “They want to know, what’s your risk profile?”

Real estate economists say mortgage rates likely won’t come down significantly anytime soon. Mortgage rates are influenced by real interest rates in the economy, and Fed officials aren’t in a rush to cut rates while inflation remains above their target and the economy remains strong.

2. Shop around with multiple lenders

Homebuyers should talk to multiple lenders before locking in their mortgage. Buyers who shop around tend to score better deals and more affordable rates, Duncan said.

“Make them compete. They don’t make money if they don’t make a loan to you, so they have an interest in satisfying you, just like you have an interest in getting a good deal. So shop around for sure,” he added.

3. Don’t try to time the market

You be in the market for a home because you can afford it at the moment — not because you’re waiting for prices or mortgage rates to come down, Duncan said.

“What I always give people as advice when they ask, ‘Is now a good time to buy a house?’ is if you have a family budget or a household budget. That’s the most important clause, because any lender is going to ask you things that’s going to come out of that budget, and if you can budget it all out, you know how to immediately answer those questions and you’ll get a better deal at the end of the day,” Duncan said.

People betting that mortgage rates or home prices will come down soon are taking a gamble. Some homebuyers can afford to speculate on the market, but most first-time homebuyers cannot, Duncan noted.

“You want to take a well-educated financial management approach to that decision because you’d like to be able to sustain it,” he said.

First-time homebuyers accounted for 32% of all home sales in 2023, well below the historical average of 38%, according to data from the National Association of Realtors.

The good news is that some real estate experts see a recovery slowly forming for the housing market. Supply is expanding and home prices are starting to fall in key metros, Charles Schwab said in a recent note.


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