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Posts with tag snack foods

Popcorn can save your life. Not.

Dumb headline spotted in today's USA Weekend magazine: "Popcorn can help save your life." Oh, wow. I mean, we all enjoy a clever eye-catching headline, but this is ridiculous! Despite that misleading title, no, the salty snack preferred by movie-goers does not have super-human, life-saving powers. In fact, it's about the nutritional benefits of whole grains. And popcorn is actually a good source of whole grains: three cups popped equals one serving of whole grains.

The article mentions an Iowa Women's Health Study finding that women fifty-five and over who eat lots of whole grains are less likely to die from inflammatory diseases like asthma or infections. Whole grain consumption is also linked to a lower risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes and cancer.

Unfortunately, there's a catch. It's safe to assume that smothering your popcorn with salt and that weirdo fake butter probably counteracts the health benefits of eating whole grains in the first place. And I'm willing to bet ninety-nine percent of us popcorn-munchers prefer it flavored, not dry. Which is precisely why "Popcorn can help save your life" is a really dumb headline!

Snack food makers on the offensive

Say you're in the snack food business. Your products are popular amongst kids and adults alike. You rely on an arsenal of creative marketing to keep the money rolling in. Also, although your snack products are - when you get down to basics - really just reconstituted corn and its byproducts, they involve some pretty high-tech manufacturing techniques. So when the profitability of those products is threatened, you'd fight like the Dickens to protect yourself, wouldn't you?

That's exactly what's going on now, as manufacturers like Coca-Cola, Hershey, Kraft, Kellogg and Frito-Lay tweak their product lineup a little. Juuust enough, mind you, to meet criticism that they are contributing to the so-called obesity epidemic - and it's terrible health complications including heart disease and Type 2 diabetes - through peddling their fat and sugar-saturated products. As this AP article details, the snack food industry changes represent an attempt to, firstly, capitalize on the growing consumer demand for "healthy" food choices and, second, to undermine their critics (including those in government) who accuse them of direct responsibility for the health crisis.

From Kellogg to McDonald's, big business execs are scrambling to protect their companies: their brand image, their profitability, their investments and, yes, their employees. No, this is not really about the health of the nation or anything lofty like that. It's about cynically protecting the bottom line. Yet, strangely, I feel no sense of outrage about this. Can you blame them for giving just a little instead of a lot? What's more, while fatty snacks may be contributing to an overall decline in public health, I'd argue it's a step too far to compare the manufacturers to, say, the tobacco industry. After all, Fritos may be a nutritionist's nightmare but there's no addiction factor here to muddy the ethical waters. Nevertheless, given what happened to Big Tobacco, the snack food industry is taking no chances.

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