After an intense workout at an Eagan fitness center, O'Neal Hampton takes a moment to enjoy his newfound celebrity with his fellow gym rats.
Forget the handshakes and high-fives, the "Biggest Loser" contestant goes straight for the hugs.
"Actually, the first time I met O'Neal, he picked me right up off the ground," said Tony Scharff, manager of the LifeTime Fitness gym. "He's the happiest guy in here."
Although O'Neal, 51, and his teammate daughter, SunShine, 24, didn't win the "Biggest Loser" title, the Richfield residents say they won the game of life.
"I feel like I cheated death," said O'Neal, who lost two siblings to cancer and a stroke while on the show. "This is my way of giving back."
Among a jam-packed schedule of media interviews, local appearances and, of course, strenuous workouts, the father-daughter team is helping to launch "The Biggest Loser Summer Challenge," a weight-loss competition involving thousands of employees at some of Minnesota's largest companies, such as Target, Medtronic and General Mills. At the end of the summer, the employers of winners in three categories will give a donation to Second Harvest Heartland.
To see O'Neal and SunShine now, it's hard to imagine them unhappy and morbidly obese with a host of medical problems. The 5-feet-11 O'Neal weighed in at 389 pounds at the start of the show in October, took up to 10 pills a day for diabetes, hypertension, cholesterol and kidney issues, and had a knee injury that kept him from walking up and down the stairs for 30 years.
"My daughter had never seen me go up a flight of steps," he said.