Originally posted by: daniel1113
I enjoyed the movie, but thought the anti-McDonalds stance was a bit much. I was more interested with the school lunch section of the film, which is where I believe the real problem is. Everyone knows that McDonalds is bad for you and everyone has the power to not eat there. However, the crap served in public schools is astounding to me. In the end, it is up to parents and schools to teach kids healthy eating habits, not McDonalds.
Originally posted by: GhettoPeanut
Originally posted by: GagHalfrunt
Originally posted by: Medicine Bear
I watched it. Have to take crap like that with a grain of salt. The guy who made it obviously had an agenda and went to extremes to prove his point.
With that said, eating fast food every day is going to be bad for you.
Eating too much of ANYTHING for 30 days straight is going to be bad for you. It doesn't matter if your calories come from Big Macs or from bean sprouts and tofu. If you triple your caloric intake and intentionally stop exercising entirely, you're going to get fat. Who on earth is dumb enough to need a documentary to understand that or gullible enough to think that overeating at McDonalds is worse than overeating anything else?
watch the movie first, then come out with in opinion. as stated earlier, its based on McD's stating that they where not bad for. if you watch what happens to the guy over the 30 day period. and there are other things he states, such as how there are ppl who do what he does.
and it is worse. mc'd has excessive amounts of sugar and fat and chemicals. go eat nothing but fruits and veggies, triple your caloric intake and see what happens, i bet the results are far far different. for starters, 6 lbs of greens are not going to turn your liver into crap. your not going to feel heart problems from all the "fats" mainly the hydrogenated oils that exist in foods like McD's that
1) exist no where in nature, at all, ever.
2) have been proven time and again to be "sticky" so to speak, in that they bind to artery walls more so then any other type of fat.
and also, your wrong.
Originally posted by: jndietz
yes.
after seeing this movie i never ate mcdonalds again. it has been four months now.
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Finally, he seemed to eat far more than a reasonable person would. There was at least one point at which he said that he had his lunch, and he was holding two very full McDonalds bags. I don't know about you, but when I eat fast food I don't eat two full bags worth.
I still eat McDonalds or other fast food now and then. Not often, maybe twice a month.
Originally posted by: bob4432
thw whole reason behind the documentary is becaue mcdonald's claim their food is not that bad for you. doing it straight for 30 days and only eating that is a bit excessive but it does show the realities of it.
there are many people that do eat fast food on a daily basis, it is pretty sad when there are more people in line at n-and-out or chick-fil-a than at the library on a daily basis
and it is worse. mc'd has excessive amounts of sugar and fat and chemicals.
The movie seems a bit extreme. I would never eat fast food everyday in the first place. I eat fast food maybe ten times at most a year. It also seemed he was eating to the point of where he would throw up in the movie (overeating by a ton).
Originally posted by: RadioHead84
Originally posted by: bob4432
thw whole reason behind the documentary is becaue mcdonald's claim their food is not that bad for you. doing it straight for 30 days and only eating that is a bit excessive but it does show the realities of it.
there are many people that do eat fast food on a daily basis, it is pretty sad when there are more people in line at n-and-out or chick-fil-a than at the library on a daily basis
How is that sad? The only way that is sad is that its bad for you but you can go comparing that to how many people like to get educated. Books and knowledge is a privalage and something we dont NEED. Food is a something we DO need
I agree with how the school lunch portion of the movie was pretty interesting, and that kids should not be served crappy food at school.
