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Eating
MacDonald's for one month...
a newsreport
Film records effects of eating only
McDonald's for a month
25.01.2004 12.00pm - By DAVID USBORNE
NEW YORK - Normally sane actors have been known to gain or lose huge
amounts of weight for their art. Think of Renee Zellweger in Bridget
Jones's Diary. Directors, of course, never have to undergo such
torture. Or so it used to be, until Morgan Spurlock had a bright idea
for a film project.
The first clue to his particular misery comes in the title of his
documentary, which has become the darling of this year's Sundance Film
Festival. It is called Super Size Me: A Film of Epic Portions and it
is a sometimes comic but serious look at America's addiction to fast
food.
Spurlock, a tall New Yorker of usually cast-iron constitution, made
himself the guinea pig in this dogged investigation into the effects
of fast food on the body. He ate only at McDonald's for a month -
three meals, every day - and took a camera crew along to record it. If
a server offered to super-size his order, he was obliged to accept -
and to ingest everything, gherkins and all.
Neither Spurlock, 33, nor the three doctors who agreed to monitor his
health during the experiment were prepared for the degree of ruin it
would wreak on his body. Within days, he was vomiting up his burgers
and battling with headaches and depression. …
When Spurlock had finished, his liver, overwhelmed by saturated fats,
had virtually turned to pate. "The liver test was the most shocking
thing," said Dr Daryl Isaacs, who joined the team to watch over him.
"It became very, very abnormal."
Spurlock put on nearly 12kg over the period and his cholesterol level
leapt from a respectable 165 to 230. He told the New York Post: "I got
desperately ill. My face was splotchy and I had this huge gut, which
I've never had in my life ... It was amazing - and really
frightening." And his girlfriend, a vegan chef? "She was completely
disgusted by me," he said.
Making the film over several months last year, Spurlock travelled
through 20 states, interviewing everyone from fast-food junkies to the
US Surgeon General and a lobbyist for the industry. McDonald's, for
whom the film can only be a public relations catastrophe, ignored his
repeated entreaties for comment.
Spurlock had the idea for the film on Thanksgiving Day 2002, slumped
on his mother's couch after eating far too much. He saw a news item
about two teenage girls in New York suing McDonald's for making them
obese. The company responded by saying their food was nutritious and
good for people. Is that so, he wondered? To find out, he committed
himself to his 30 days of Big Mac bingeing.
The film does not yet have a distributor and, given the advertising
clout of McDonald's, that may prove problematic. But the critics at
Sundance seem to have been captivated. Certainly, the film is blessed
by good timing. Obesity has in recent months captured headlines as
America's new health scourge. The humour of the approach - and
Spurlock's own suffering - obviously helps.
At the festival in Park City, Utah, he has had teams handing out
"Unhappy Meal" bags on the streets with a few "Fat Fun Facts". For
instance, one in four Americans visits a fast-food restaurant every
day. And did you know that McDonald's feeds more people around the
world every day than the population of Spain? The makers have
self-rated the film "F" - for "fat audiences".
McDonald's has finally been forced to comment. "Consumers can achieve
balance in their daily dining decisions by choosing from our array of
quality offerings and range of portion sizes to meet their taste and
nutrition goals," it said in a statement last week.
Spurlock claims that the goal was not to attack McDonald's as such.
Among the issues he highlights is the willingness of schools to feed
students nothing but burgers and pizza. "If there's one thing we could
accomplish with the film, it is that we make people think about what
they put in their mouth," he said. "So the next time you do go into a
fast-food restaurant and they say, 'Would you like to upsize that?'
you think about it and say, 'Maybe I won't. Maybe I'll stick with the
medium this time.'"
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