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Morgans
Spurlock's 30-day McDonalds diet is subject to specific
rules.
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A
fat lot of good
Super Size Me
Stars
Morgan Spurlock and countless McDonald’s staff
Reviewer: LT Simone Heyer
Rating:
3 Stars
Super
Size Me, with the accompanying advertising picture of a fat-faced
Ronald McDonald, fairly well sums up the idea that Mc- Donald’s
isn’t good for you. Morgan Spurlock sets out to prove this
with a fast food diet, even though McDonald’s has low-fat,
healthy food on their menu. He gives himself 30 days to Mac
himself up and follows his own set of very Mcspecific rules:
- He
must eat three square Mcmeals every day;
-
If McDonald’s doesn’t sell it, he can’t eat it;
- He
must eat everything on the menu at least once; and
-
If they offer to ‘super size’ the meal, he must accept.
After three days, Morgan can finally stomach his new diet
and before long gets addicted to the high that the high-sugar,
high-fat meals create.
Morgan validates all he does.
He
sees three doctors and a dietician before he starts the
diet – all clear him as being ultra-fit and healthy.
The doctors aren’t overly concerned about his diet plans
– they don’t think it’s healthy, but are pretty sure bad
things won’t happen after only 30 days.
To ensure a more realistic result, Morgan decides to cut
down on his walking.
He usually walks more than most people and wants to show
what high fast food diet can do to the average American.
He consults real health experts – well, they have doctor
at the front of their name – and offers the audience plenty
of statistics, weights, and ingredient run-downs.
The film also looks at the problem of rearing fat kids in
American schools.
One run-of-the-mill school cafeteria is pitted against a
healthy, fresh-food, nojunk cafeteria.
I expected Super Size Me to be full of anti-McDonald’s sentiment,
taking the health thing over the top, then generally bagging
Maccas.
But it was informative and entertaining, in the spirit of
Michael Moore-style documentaries.
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