Very Sad News: ‘1000-Lb Sisters’ Fans Demand Chris, Amanda & Misty Get Their Own TLC Show!

Hello everyone—welcome back to my channel. Please subscribe and keep watching, because today we’re diving into something that’s been building for a while, and now it’s getting impossible for TLC to ignore.

1,000-lb Sisters fans have been glued to the journeys of Amy Halterman and Tammy Slaton for years. The show didn’t just begin with weight loss—it began with stories. Real struggles, real stakes, real fear. Over time, the series slowly widened its lens, pulling in more of the people around them… including the siblings fans already recognized as more than “background characters.”

And lately? The focus is shifting.

Because once you see enough of Chris, Amanda, and Misty, you start to understand something terrifyingly simple: the audience doesn’t just want them around—they want them front and center.

That’s right. Across social media and fan discussions, the same idea keeps popping up like a breaking news alert: fans are demanding TLC make a spin-off show with Chris, Amanda, and Misty.

It’s not a quiet request, either. It’s loud. It’s specific. And it’s getting repeated so often that it starts to feel less like a casual suggestion and more like a full-on campaign.

And where does that talk come from? Redditors. Redditors Speak. And if you’ve ever watched a fandom on Reddit, you already know how it goes—people don’t just comment, they declare. They don’t just watch, they vote with their attention.

So one Redditor posed the question: “Would anyone else want to see a spin-off series with these three?”

You could practically hear the timeline explode.

Fans flooded the discussion with messages that weren’t just “nice,” but detailed. The kind of comments that read like someone is describing exactly what they want to binge next.

One fan wrote that these three would be fun because of a combination that’s rare on reality TV: witty humor + common sense. Not chaos with no purpose—humor with a brain behind it. Another fan went even further, saying that Chris, Amanda, and Misty are brilliant, and that Chris—specifically—always makes them happy with what they described as his pearls of wisdom.

And that’s where the momentum becomes dangerous for TLC’s planning. Because the more viewers watch these siblings, the more they realize something: these aren’t just characters—they’re engines for entertainment.

They bring personality.
They bring advice.
And they bring that rare reality-TV chemistry where even a small moment turns into a quote people instantly replay.

But here’s the real reason this conversation is getting so intense—because this season isn’t just showing weight loss journeys anymore. It’s showing change happening in real time… and it’s pulling Chris, Amanda, and Misty out from under the radar.

For a long time, while everything was happening with Amy and Tammy, the siblings kind of stayed in the background. Viewers saw them, sure—but not in the “main storyline” way.

Then this season rolled in and completely flipped the script.

Suddenly, Chris isn’t just present—he’s pushing through a major new chapter.

Chris has already gone through weight loss surgery. And now, he’s working toward something that sounds simple until you understand what it means: qualifying for skin removal surgery.

And this is where the suspense hits.

Because every time Chris tries to move forward—every time he works out, every time he pushes his body toward what comes next—something gets in the way. Not motivation. Not effort.

His skin.

Fans aren’t treating this like a minor detail. They’re reacting like this is a countdown clock—because people want him to get that next procedure as fast as possible. They’re cheering for him to move beyond the “before” and into the “fully transformed” era.

And in the world of reality TV, where audiences fall in love with progress, that kind of storyline doesn’t fade—it intensifies.

Meanwhile, Misty and Amanda watched Amy and Tammy go through their own health struggles and transformations. They saw what it costs. They saw what it requires. And somehow, it didn’t just stay entertainment—it became a warning and a motivation at the same time.

So Misty and Amanda started doing something that viewers will recognize immediately: they’re hopping on that train too.

They’ve begun watching what they eat.
They’ve started working out again.
And they’re aware—fully aware—of how much weight they’ve gained.

That awareness matters because it changes the tone. This isn’t a