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Food Documentaries- The Men Who Made Us Fat
Episode 1 of 3
Jacques
Peretti travels to America to investigate the story of high-fructose corn
syrup.
Episode 1
Duration: 1 hour
Around the world, obesity levels are
rising. More people are now overweight than undernourished. Two thirds of
British adults are overweight and one in four of us is classified as obese. In
the first of this three-part series, Jacques Peretti traces those responsible
for revolutionizing our eating habits, to find out how decisions made in
America 40 years ago influence the way we eat now.
Peretti travels to America to investigate
the story of high-fructose corn syrup.
The sweetener was championed in the US in the 1970s by Richard Nixon's
agriculture secretary Earl Butz to make use of the excess corn grown by
farmers. Cheaper and sweeter than sugar, it soon found its way into almost all
processed foods and soft drinks. HFCS is not only sweeter than sugar, it also
interferes with leptin, the hormone that controls appetite, so once you start
eating or drinking it, you don't know when to stop.
Endocrinologist Robert Lustig was one of
the first to recognize the dangers of HFCS
but his findings were discredited at the time. Meanwhile a US Congress report
blamed fat, not sugar, for the disturbing rise in cardio-vascular disease and
the food industry responded with ranges of 'low fat', 'heart healthy' products in which the fat
was removed - but the substitute was yet more sugar.
Meanwhile, in 1970s Britain, food
manufacturers used advertising campaigns to promote the idea of snacking
between meals. Outside the home, fast food chains offered clean, bright
premises with tempting
burgers cooked and served with a very un-British zeal and efficiency.
Twenty years after the arrival of McDonalds, the number of fast food outlets in
Britain had quadrupled.
Episode 2 of 3
Exploring the history of the
supersized fast-food meal and other promotional tactics.
Episode 2
Duration: 1 hour
Jacques Peretti investigates how the
concept of 'supersizing' changed our eating habits forever. How did we - once a
nation of moderate eaters - start to want more?
Speaking to Mike Donahue, former McDonalds
Vice President, Peretti explores the history behind the idea of supersizing.
Forty years ago, McDonalds hired David Wallerstein, a former cinema manager who
had introduced the idea of selling larger popcorn servings in his Chicago
cinema. Wallerstein realized that people would eat more but they did not like
the idea of appearing gluttonous by going back for seconds. By increasing the
portion sizes and the cost, he could sell more food. In 1972, he introduced the
idea to McDonalds and their first large fries went on sale.
By the 1980s, we were eating more - and we
were also eating more often. Perretti speaks with industry professionals to
examine the story behind the introduction of value meals, king-size
snacks and multi-buy promotions.
How did the advertising industry encourage us to eat more often?
The programme also explores the developments
in dietary advice. By 2003, the Chief Medical Officer was warning of an
'obesity time bomb.' Peretti speaks to obesity expert Professor Philip James,
who made recommendations in his 1996 report that the food industry should cease
targeting children in their advertisements. He also speaks with Professor Terry
Wilkin, who led a pioneering study into childhood weight gain; and former
Labour MP David Hinchliffe, who chaired the 2003 Parliamentary Select Committee
on Health.
Episode 3 of 3
A look at how marketing can
seduce consumers into buying supposed 'healthy foods'.
Episode 3
Duration: 1 hour
Jacques Peretti examines assumptions about
what is and is not healthy. He also looks at how product marketing can seduce
consumers into buying supposed 'healthy foods' such as muesli and juices, both
of which can be high in sugar.
He speaks with Simon Wright, an 'organic
consultant' for Sainsbury's in the 1990s, who explains how the food industry
cashed in on the public's concerns around salmonella, BSE and GM crops. By 1999
the organic industry was worth over £605M, a rise of 232% within two years.
How did the mainstream food producers
compete? Peretti speaks with Kath Dalmeny, former policy director at the Food
Commission, who explains some of the marketing strategies used by mainstream
food producers to keep our custom.
The programme also explores the impact of
successive government initiatives and health campaigns, such as the proposal of
'traffic
light labeling', the introduction of which the food industry lobbied
hard against.
But in 2012, when we have an Olympic Games
sponsored by McDonalds and Coca Cola, has anything changed?
Watch this video and learn why it is better to cook some type of food
than to eat it raw. Learn why cooking our food created 'big human brains'? Food Documentaries-
Did the Discovery of Cooking Make Us Human?
Documentary Film
Summary- The Men Who Made Us Fat
It's a canny title The Men Who Made Us Fat.
With so many of us now overweight, and an increasing number actually obese,
there can be no shortage of viewers receptive to the idea that it really has
nothing to do with us at all. It wasn't moral failure that left us like this,
we discover to our relief. It was done to us by that useful entity,
"them".
That, essentially, is the argument of
Jacques Peretti's timely series about the food industry, which examines the
political and commercial origins of the current obesity crisis. Not everyone
could quite cleave to the party line. Beulah, one of the exercising women with
whom Peretti began his film, unhelpfully suggested that personal responsibility
might also have something to do with it: "There was always fruit and
vegetables
in the house," she confessed cheerfully, "It was just my choice that
I always went for the unhealthy food." We didn't see a lot of Beulah after
that.
Then again the ready availability of
"unhealthy food" is the big issue here, and the first finger that
Peretti pointed was aimed at Earl Butz, Secretary of Agriculture under Richard
Nixon and an enthusiastic cheerleader for the industrialization of American
farming. It was Butz who encouraged farmers to plant from "fencerow to
fencerow" and Butz who helped ensure that the resulting surplus of corn
went into the production of high-fructose corn syrup, which boosted the profits
of America's food conglomerates. For anyone who's read Eric Schlosser's Fast
Food Nation or seen the documentary King Corn this won't exactly have been
news, but Peretti carried the story forwards to show that good intentions
inadvertently colluded with self-serving ones to make things worse.
The second finger was pointed at Ancel
Keys, an American nutritionist who helped promote the idea that dietary fat was
the most hazardous component of our diet (an
idea he came up with, the film suggested, while watching lardy Britons stuff
their faces with fish and chips). As the quantity of corn syrup steadily
increased in processed foods (piling on the calories and tinkering with the
very brain chemistry that allows us to say "Enough") our nutritional
vigilance was directed elsewhere. And then George McGovern compounded the
effect by issuing a government report on the American diet. American food
producers realized they could make a killing in the field of
"fat-free" and "low-fat" foods, but had to ramp up the
sugar to stop it tasting like the boxes it was packaged in.
The least palatable additives in Peretti's
film were the obligatory appearances by industry flacks, barely able to
convince even themselves that their platitudes about consumer choice and
disputed science were true, but spieling them out anyway. "It's like
saying because you go in the ocean you get bit by a shark," said Susan
Neely, president of the American Beverage Association, as she dismissed the
suggestion that soft drinks had anything at all to do with obesity in the US.
No, Susan. It's like saying because you go in the ocean you get wet. None of
which, of course, entirely undermines the point that Beulah made at the very
beginning of the programme. Even if "the men" are to blame for that
unshiftable spare tire, the person best equipped to remove it is you.
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