Quizzes & Puzzles44 mins ago
Supersize Me
Am I missing something? Was this a stupid pointless experiment or was there a reason for it?
I mean you don't need to be nutritionist or a dietician to know that if you eat McDonalds three times a day you are going to put on weight and your health is going to suffer.
I'm obviously being thick, but can somebody please explain the point please. Or was it simply to make money? If this is the case, then fair enough.
Also, the two fat girls suing McDonald's for making them fat - purlease: thankfully the suit failed, but what a scary precedent if it hadn't (and the cynic in me wonders whether the fat girls were still chowing down on McD's during the suit).
The fact of the matter is one or two McD's a week will not hurt you.
So, please enlighten me.
Ta
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Ducati. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.On the estate I live on the staple diet for most of the kids in McDonalds, takeaway chips, deep fried spare ribs or KFC, and I don't just mean once or twice a week I mean as soon as their old enough to eat solids and probably about 4 times a week. I believe that some people don't recognise the health risks from eating such crap.
I found the documentary/ film entertaining but I think anyone that tries to look after their, and their children's, health should know this already. I don't think it will reach the people who don't know any better.
I
At the beginning of the film it explained his reasons for doing it.
The lawyers for McDs against the 2 girls trying to sue them were told that unless they could prove that McDs were solely responsible for the detrimental effect to their health, the case would be thrown out. So Morgan decided to prove it
And, no matter what the official statement from McDonalds is, I think it's fairly likely that they removed their "SuperSize" options as a result of this film.
They fail to mention the additives which are arguably there to make their food more "addictive".
They also sued someone for saying that there's more nutrition in the packaging than in the burgers so were obviously trying to distance themselves from the fatty unhealthy fast food image and position their food as an acceptable part of your diet. In addition they sell salads which (in the film) were shown to be just as fatty as a Big Mac if I remember correctly.
Ultimately, a number of doctors completely underestimated the damaging effects that this experiment would have so if people with medical expertise can do this, the general population can easily assume that McDonalds isn't as bad for you as it actually is. That alone justifies it.