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Fast Food Industry
Term Paper ID:35906
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Essay Subject:
The fast food is devastatingly critiqued by Eric Schlosser's Fast Food Nation and Morgan ...... More...
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3 Pages / 675 Words
2 sources, 2 Citations,
MLA Format
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Paper Abstract: A critique of the fast food industry that discusses Eric Schlosser's book, Fast Food Nation and Morgan Spurlock's documentary film, Supersize Me. Contends that both present ample evidence that the health and longevity of the American people are being severely damaged by the fast food industry.
Paper Introduction: Supersize Me Eric Schlosser\'s Fast Food Nation uses the truth to persuade hisreaders of the reality of the facts and opinions presented in his book Unlike the devious deceptive and manipulative methods used by the fastfood industry to stimulate sales on television and other media Schlossersimply presents the evidence and lets the reader decide We are all welcometo go to the Net and challenge his facts and figures But the main theme ofhis book is so readily apparent to anyone who has
Text of the Paper:
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But as Morgan Spurlock proved in his devastating documentarySupersize Me, eating a diet of fast food exclusively for one month nearlykilled him, and is denagerous for any human being. The evidence is intrinsicallydamning. NY. His basic point is a chilling one: the fast food industry and theirmedia commercials consistently hide the many social, health, nutritional,and ecological costs of their single-minded drive for profits from sellingthe American people food that is not good for them. We are all welcometo go to the Net and challenge his facts and figures. Harper Perrenial. The result of all this is an unprecedented explosion of obesitythroughout the country. A critical analysis mustdeal, as Schlosser has done, with a deconstruction of the huge gap betweenthe attractively deceptive myths about the industry found in theircommercials, and its tawdry realities. Low-paying dead-end teenage jobs,unhealthy food containing far too much fat and sugar, artificial flavours,taste over nutrition, union breaking, and the transformation ofagricultural practices to accommodate the demands of the fast food industryare just a few of the issues that the author raises. Fueled by vast sums of money,effectively using bought politicians as shills for their private interests,unaccountable corporate operatives have insinuated themselves into areas ofAmerican life formerly considered public, from health care to education tomass media to our food supply. DVD. 2 4.Spurlock, Morgan. Although many will read Schlosser'sbook and see Spurlock's film, the vast majority of fast food consumers willcontinue their self-destructive addiction, public schools will still serveAmerica's children food that hurts them, the fast food industry willcontinue to make millions, and the politicians, lawyers, and mediaconglomerates who serve them will continue to prevent them from beingaccountable to the American public. Schlosser has done an enormous public service by simply amassing thefacts and putting them in a coherent form. Like the facts inSchlosser's book, the data concerning his deteriorating health during hismonth-long ordeal were incontrovertible, and certified by three independentphysicians, as well as a professional dietician and a physical therapist. Fast Food Nation is another in a long line of muckraking critiques ofthe American corporate state. Supersize Me (64933) Eric Schlosser's Fast Food Nation uses the truth to persuade hisreaders of the reality of the facts and opinions presented in his book.Unlike the devious, deceptive, and manipulative methods used by the fastfood industry to stimulate sales on television and other media, Schlossersimply presents the evidence and lets the reader decide. Not satisfied with television and direct marketing to children, thefast food industry has wormed its way into the nation's public schools withadvertising and vending machines. But the main theme ofhis book is so readily apparent to anyone who has lived in this society forany length of time that any quibbles about details are essentiallyirrelevant. Although you can find it sold in Barnes andNoble, Borders, and on Amazon it is highly unlikely that the mainstreamelectronic media will prominently feature its important insights. Fast Food Nation. Supersize Me. Works CitedSchlosser, Eric. 2 4. They do not have yourbest interests in mind. They have consistently placed their privateinterests above the public good, and we are all losers as a result. First and foremost, the fast food industry depends on the use of massmedia to stimulate the people to buy its products. This phenomenon seems to be replicated whenever thefast food chains move into foreign markets like China, where McDonald'sfood is listed as the favorite of the nation's youth, and Ronald McDonaldis the most widely recognized character in the world. This is just one of many devastatinglyserious problems this country faces, and shows the sad state of affairs ofthe United States at this point in our history. The grim truth presented by these two pioneering muckrakers will notbe broadcast on national television. Itseverely condemns the role that corporate television plays in furtheringthe abuses of the fast food industry, from its untrammelled manipulation ofAmerica's children through advertising aimed specifically at them, to itssurpression of coverage of the very issues that Schlosser brings up, fromthe low wages and high turnover of its mostly teenaged workforce, to itslong-term lobbying against effective governmental inspection of our foodsupply, to the obesity epidemic consistently tied to it by independentmedical observers, including the Surgeon General of the United States. He demonstrates the empty values of the corporate players who havebrought us the destruction of America's public transportationinfrastructure (General Motors and Ford), reduced the natural tastes offood to chemical flavor additives (International Flavor and Fragrance),feed the nation's schoolchildren the cheapest and most dangerous meat, andhave successfully propagated a positive image of the lethal tobacco smokinghabit into the innocent young minds of our youth (Joe Camel advertisingcampaign). From politics to fast food, from religion to the stock market, fromtraditional mass media to the Internet, a ruthlessly efficient force haswormed its way into nearly every aspect of our supposed democracy, withoutever having been given the public's consent. They also liberally sprinkle theubiquitous Channel 1, the corporate media show transmitted to thousands ofUS schools every day, with fast food and beverage advertisements.
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