Interesting Piece on Morgan Spurlock/Supersize Me

sparrow

Cathlete
Hi Ladies, pulled this from MSNBC, thought it would be interesting.

Sparrow


Spurlock Food Scare a Super Size Scam
Tuesday, August 16, 2005
By Radley Balko

Morgan Spurlock (search) seems to be everywhere these days. The F/X cable channel just slotted his new series "30 Days" for a second season, and he also just inked another show on Comedy Central, on which he'll head a panel that discusses current events.

Spurlock, of course, was the filmmaker behind the much-acclaimed documentary"Super Size Me," (search) in which he ate 5,000 calories worth of McDonalds food each day for 30 days, shunned any exercise or physical activity, then blamed the Golden Arches when – surprise! – peculiar things began to happen to his body. He has also just published "Don’t Eat This Book," a book that takes direct aim at the food industry.

Spurlock seems to fancy himself a modern-day muckraker (search). The problem is, his various media ventures are often distorted by a complete lack of context and, at times, outright misinformation. What’s worse, few in the media have been willing to call him on it.

The series "30 Days" is based on the same premise as "Super Size Me." Each episode immerses a real person into an unfamiliar environment, generally with the aim of teaching some life lesson. Like "Super Size Me," the show has its charm, though it also suffers from much of the same conceit.

Columnist Debbie Schlussel (search) recently wrote in the Wall Street Journal that she refused to participate in an episode in which a man lives for a month in a Muslim community because producers told her the outcome of the show, billed as a documentary, had been predetermined. In another episode, a mother goes on a binge drinking spree to teach her daughter the dangers of alcohol. Both the mother and the daughter have since publicly complained on Internet message boards and web sites about how instructions from producers and distortions in the editing process created caricatures of them both that were at odds with reality.

Spurlock's new book has many of the same problems. Marketed as a companion reader to "Super Size Me," "Don't Eat This Book" (search) lambastes the food industry for deceptive marketing and bad business practices. The problem is, for someone so critical of deceptive marketing practices, Spurlock himself seems to have problems with the truth.

Just a few examples:

--Spurlock writes in his book that McDonalds uses beef that has been fed the ground-up remains of other cows. But the FDA has banned this practice of feeding ruminant (search) remnants to other ruminants since 1997. Spurlock essentially accuses McDonalds of breaking federal law for the past eight years, and provides no sources for his accusation.

--In one particularly egregious passage, Spurlock tells his readers that the FDA has linked the artificial sweetener aspartame (search) to side effects such as headaches, dizziness, nausea and hallucinations. But Spurlock's own source for that passage -- a 1999 issue of the FDA Consumer -- lists these effects only to specifically refute them. The newsletter attributes the claims to "[w]ebsites with screaming headlines," and finds them wholly without merit.

--Spurlock writes that "a friend" told him McDonalds no longer calls its shakes "milkshakes" because they're all chemicals, and no milk. This is an urban legend. The primary ingredient in a McDonalds shake is "whole milk."

Spurlock did not respond to numerous requests to be interviewed for this column.

Of course, these are just a few examples. Much of the book rests on the same kinds of poor sourcing and shoddy research. Spurlock appears to have run with any dirt on the food industry he could find. He even dismisses the Ronald McDonald Children's Charities, which he implies are merely a ruse to get sick kids hooked on the Big Mac.

None of this is to say that McDonalds or the food industry in general are perfect corporate citizens. Nor are all of Spurlock's criticisms of them without merit. For a long time, for example, McDonalds claimed its fries were vegetarian, even as it continued to flavor them with beef tallow. Vegetarians and people with religious dietary restrictions were rightly upset. The company apologized, and paid a settlement. McDonalds also reneged on a promise to cut the trans-fats from its food. Here too, the company apologized, and paid a settlement.

"Super Size Me" was in many ways a hoax that generated false public outrage against a food company, while netting Spurlock fame and fortune. In this regard, he's not much different from Anna Ayala (search), the woman who falsely claimed to have found a human finger in her bowl of Wendy's chili last April in order to win a big settlement.

Good police work stopped Ayala's scam, which cost Wendy's $25 million in lost sales, and may cost Ayala up to nine years in prison. Unfortunately, the media, which should be acting as Spurlock's watchdog, have yet to hold Spurlock accountable for his inaccuracies. Only a few opinion columnists and restaurant industry spokesmen have taken him on, people Spurlock dismisses in his book not by actually addressing their arguments, but by merely pointing out where they get their funding.

Ironically enough, Spurlock began his television career at MTV on a show called "I Bet You Will," in which he paid people to eat disgusting things on camera. He once paid a woman $250 to shave her head, then eat a giant ball of her own hair mixed with butter. He paid another man to eat an entire jar of mayonnaise. Still another to swallow dog feces. When asked if he felt his show was exploitive, he replied, "No way. Everybody knows what they're getting into. Everybody has a good time. If somebody walks by and doesn't enjoy it, hey, it's a free country. Just keep on walking, man."

Spurlock has apparently had an epiphany about personal responsibility and good nutrition. Today, he wants tight government controls over how food companies market their products. But a close reading of Spurlock's oeuvre thus far suggests he's no Upton Sinclair.

The media should stop fawning over Spurlock, and take his future output with a healthy helping of skepticism.
 
That is interesting, & I'm not at all surprised. I liked the movie, but I thought it was really, really exaggerated. Certainly I can see how eating at MacD's only for a month can make you gain weight & not feel so hot, but by the end of the movie he was acting like he was gonna die & in fact if I remember correctly, one of the drs. he saw pretty much told him "if you keep this up you're gonna die."

Well duh, we're all gonna die, but these people acted as if the guy would be a goner within a week if he kept eating quarter pounders. Gimme a break.
 
Sounds like Radley Balko doesn't like it when he hears fast food will kill ya!:p

Actually...I could go off on a tangent right now but what's the point!;-) If people want to eat that sh$t every day, it's putting fat on their ass, not mine.
 
I agree. Except it's wreaking havoc on our health insurance. I think it was last year or the year before that obesity was classified as a medical condition and its treatments (stomach stapling, dieticians/nutritionists, etc.) are now covered by insurance.

Huh? So these people can't stop shoveling food down their throats, & now I have to pay for it? Sheesh. I'd much rather buy them a freakin treadmill.

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Laura, Sparrow....please don't get me started:7 I promised myself I wouldn't "go off" and you had to mention health insurance costs! Must.....show.....restraint.....keep......mouth....shut:+

Loving the idea of buying them a treadmill instead but the brutally sad reality is, they already have one and it is much more of a hamper than a piece of exercise equipment!

My mom came for a visit and tried to "drape" some clothes on my treadmill and I drew the line! I told her my beautiful machine was not designed, nor does it deserve such disrespect!:p It's o.k., she knows I'm nuts!!!;)
 
I'm glad you posted the article too, Sparrow. I rented "Supersize Me" a few weeks ago and spent most of my viewing time waiting for this great movie to start. Never happened. Give me "Spellbound" for a documentary, or "Trekkies", thank you very much.

I think Spurlock could be re-named "Spurious" here - not to mention Self-Aggrandizing Putz. (And, just in passing, that little snot girlfriend of his, The *Ahem* VEGAN CHEF, made me want to apply for a gun permit.)

I think I'll go out for a Quarter Pounder with Cheese now. I may even get supersize fries.

A-Jock
 
Actually, eating McDonald's does not put fat on your ass, as you so eloquently put it.(thought there was no cursing in here) Overeating at McDonald's puts the fat on. That's the point that very few seem to understand.
I am not promoting fast food because it does wreak havoc on cholesterol, etc., but you have to overeat it to get fat. Just like anything else.
 

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