A woman 32 years trying to become the heaviest woman ever, but its nearest competitor, a woman who holds the record for "World's most obese mother," is having a difficult time heavyweight releasing claims to fame, even as he said he would go on a diet.
Susanne Eman, a 728-pound woman in Casa Grande, Arizona, is trying to get into Guinness World Records as "the toughest World Women," and hopes to achieve its objectives at the time he was 41. 2012 edition of the book will be released later this month.
The last woman to hold the title, 1,200 pounds of Rosalie Bradford, died in 2006.
"The category is currently open," said Guinness representatives HuffPost Odd News. "We have several claims that we are researching, and we may soon have a new title holder."
Eman has told reporters that he wanted to destroy the recordings with the packaging at £ 1,600. Its main purpose: weighing in at one ton.
One of the rival high profile Eman, Donna Simpson, of Akron, Ohio, holds the Guinness record for the heaviest woman ever gave birth to a child. He won the title by weighing a whopping 532 pounds when she gave birth to her daughter, Jacqueline, in February 2007 - an event that required 30 doctors.
Simpson has just announced to the world through HuffPost Weird News that he decided to go on a diet, but he had trouble letting go of the "prestige" in line with the honor of being the heaviest American woman - and she said Eman viewed as an upstart who tried to seize the hard-earned fame.
"He Goo Goo Lady Gaga to my Lady," Simpson laughed, adding that no one in the "feeder" - a subculture of men who like women who are great - who knows who Eman.
"If he is a serious winner, people will know about him," said Simpson.
Simpson said he suspected that Eman who conspired with her former manager and is trying to get publicity in order to compete for her fan base. Even worse: He accused Eman tried to retrieve her "obese Mother World" title.
"He told me as he scaled the world's fattest mother, but she did not understand that the Guinness gives notes because I was 532 pounds when I gave birth," said Simpson. "He's not that big when she gave birth to her children."
Susanne Eman, a 728-pound woman in Casa Grande, Arizona, is trying to get into Guinness World Records as "the toughest World Women," and hopes to achieve its objectives at the time he was 41. 2012 edition of the book will be released later this month.
The last woman to hold the title, 1,200 pounds of Rosalie Bradford, died in 2006.
"The category is currently open," said Guinness representatives HuffPost Odd News. "We have several claims that we are researching, and we may soon have a new title holder."
Eman has told reporters that he wanted to destroy the recordings with the packaging at £ 1,600. Its main purpose: weighing in at one ton.
One of the rival high profile Eman, Donna Simpson, of Akron, Ohio, holds the Guinness record for the heaviest woman ever gave birth to a child. He won the title by weighing a whopping 532 pounds when she gave birth to her daughter, Jacqueline, in February 2007 - an event that required 30 doctors.
Simpson has just announced to the world through HuffPost Weird News that he decided to go on a diet, but he had trouble letting go of the "prestige" in line with the honor of being the heaviest American woman - and she said Eman viewed as an upstart who tried to seize the hard-earned fame.
"He Goo Goo Lady Gaga to my Lady," Simpson laughed, adding that no one in the "feeder" - a subculture of men who like women who are great - who knows who Eman.
"If he is a serious winner, people will know about him," said Simpson.
Simpson said he suspected that Eman who conspired with her former manager and is trying to get publicity in order to compete for her fan base. Even worse: He accused Eman tried to retrieve her "obese Mother World" title.
"He told me as he scaled the world's fattest mother, but she did not understand that the Guinness gives notes because I was 532 pounds when I gave birth," said Simpson. "He's not that big when she gave birth to her children."