Tuesday, November 1, 2011
W8: A Response to B. R. Myers' "Crusade"
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
W6: (Not-so) Secret Recipes
Look upon your God, Babylon. |
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
W5: Bluh
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
W4: Super Size Me review
In Super Size Me, filmmaker Morgan Spurlock undergoes a month-long experiment, in which he is required to eat three meals at McDonalds a day and to abstain from exercise, on-foot commuting and alternative sources of nutrition. Through documentation of this experiment, as well as interviews from industry insiders and research regarding rising rates of obesity in the United States, Spurlock hopes to call attention to the powerful role that fast food companies, particularly McDonald’s, have played in “supersizing” Americans. I believe that the film is effective as an awareness-raising feature length PSA, but fails as a serious critical look at the fast food industry, thanks to its absurd and largely irrelevant central experiment, as well as its flawed methodology.
From the get-go, the film’s focus on Spurlock’s experiment feels like a frivolous charade. The specifics of the project—three meals from McDonald’s a day, roughly 5000 calories per day, no exercise, etc.—are reflective only of a mythical American super-slob; the lone element of the experiment representative of the statistically-determined “average American” is the number of steps taken by Spurlock per day. While it could serve as a glimpse at the short-term effects of exaggerated overeating, the experiment says little about the reality of improper eating—it is a bastardized, mainstream variation of what a serious long-term study of the effects of eating fast food might look like, without any of the tedious credibility and relevance. Of course, it’s still a wildly amusing premise; Spurlock’s sense of humor carries throughout the experiment, interrupted only by occasional segments of vomit-inducing soap opera exchanges between Spurlock and his girlfriend.
The segments of Super Size Me unrelated to Spurlock’s experiment, however, are on point. Spurlock’s scrutiny of the fast food industry’s despicable strategies for marketing to children is particularly memorable. In one scene, several children are unable to recognize both George Washington and Jesus Christ, but are instantly familiar with Ronald McDonald—the power of this scene extends far beyond the power of marketing and makes an almost poetic statement on the whole of post-modernity. The wide variety of sources interviewed in the film—from silver-tongued lobbyists and medical professionals to cafeteria workers and schoolchildren—allows the film to focus in on the multi-faceted nature of America’s obesity problem. These interviews are both enlightening and provocative. There is a noticeable sting to one lunch lady’s admittance that she rarely does more than reheat food for schoolchildren on a daily basis.
Sadly, Spurlock’s interviews of “ordinary people” on the street are thuggish at best; We see continuous talking head commentary from the same six or seven interviewees, all of whom happen to be either blithely (and conveniently) unaware or—and who would have expected this—members of the lower class. As viewers, we are implored to suspend our disbelief that while in New York City, the filmmaker was unable to find one interview subject on the street that did not fall under his pre-established “average American” label—represented, apparently, by obese people already standing outside of a McDonalds or the uneducated poor.
That being said, I still enjoyed Super Size Me. It was funny, informative, and occasionally provocative. While I question a number of Spurlock’s techniques and choices, I believe any attempt to raise awareness on pressing cultural issues such as this, powered by hyperbole or otherwise, is admirable.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
W3: The Dark Side of The Grill
For a period of roughly two years, off and on, my brother and I worked alongside each other at Steak and Shake. When I began my fledgling career at the age of sixteen, I saw little of my elder brother at the restaurant—as a seasoned member of the fast food community, his insider connections allowed him access to the coveted, higher-paying nighttime shift from midnight to eight in the morning. Only after a month or so of working did I finally share my first daytime shift with my brother—it and subsequent shifts with him were painful moments of bitter disillusionment.
Seeing that I had some difficulty increasing my efficiency on the grill, my brother took it upon himself to share with me some of his secret techniques. I watched in horror as the production of grilled cheese, a stubborn and time-consuming item, was streamlined by placing two slices of cheese directly onto a greasy grill for several seconds and then scraped onto unbuttered pieces of toast. I wept as our pre-cooked pepperjack bacon was made crispy not on a grill, but in a microwave. Perhaps most alarming to me was my brother’s refusal to follow protocol by lightly toasting each bun on the grill before plating a sandwich, considering it to be a “waste of energy.” Watching my sibling destroy my preconceptions of him as a cook with integrity brought me back to the first time I watched him play soccer in high school: expecting him to be an assertive confident player, I was disappointed to see him leave the bench late into the game, only to inadequately chase after opposing players like a timid child.
I do not, however, mean to imply that all of my brother’s actions at Steak and Shake were driven by The Dark Side. During his tour of duty at the restaurant, he created—and shared with me—a number of original, unauthorized concoctions that the two of us provided to friends as a part of our secret menu. Many originals came and went over the years, but there were a number of standouts that survived the test of time: Pasta A La Troy, the Strawberry Cheesecake Shake, the Cold Cut Steakburger, and the Jill special—a chicken sandwich with guacamole and Fritos, created for and named after our favorite night shift waitress.
My brother’s magnum opus was, without a doubt, his Fiesta Fries. To prepare the dish, hot chili was poured on top of a plate freshly prepared French fries, and then topped with shreds of spicy pepperjack bacon, jalapenos, and nacho cheese. The fries were then covered with a layer of pepperjack cheese and heated further in the microwave to give them a gooey outer layer. A second sprinkle of bacon bits and pico de gallo topped of the fries—I liked to eat them with a side of guacamole. Special consideration had to be given to the fries—if they were too crispy they would distract from the delicate flavors of the added topping and if they were too limp they would need to be eaten with a spork. There was some disagreement between us when it came to the quality of pre-fiestafication Steak and Shake fries; I considered them to be just right, while my brother felt they were too thin and under-salted. Regardless, we could both agree that the final product was an orgasmic, mouth-watering piece of fast food artistry that allowed taste buds to briefly taste the Sublime and managed to wash away my bitter tears of disappointment in a sea of spicy chipotle sauce.