barbara korsch: many people believe a fat baby's a healthy baby, but from a health point of view, more obese babies go on to be fat adults. stopping the progression of obesity in childhood can be a challenge, as dr. korsch and a team of specialists learned. and we had a really hard time getting good results, as has everybody. and one trouble was, the nutritionist would earnestly say, "don't eat between meals," and all that. a lot of those families didn't even have meals. they don't sit down together either at breakfast or lunch or dinner and eat a meal with the children involved, so that it's gotten quite chaotic, and whatever is quick and available and tastes good. and the media, dr. korsch contends, just compound the problem. barbara korsch: television watching is the single thing that has been consistently associated with obesity. and there have even been some really interesting studies that if a child is just just watching television, where they tend to sit very passively, usually also snacking, that their metabolism actually goes down. it's a little bit like hibernation. in recent