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			by April M. Short 
			June 18, 2013 
			from
			
			AlterNet Website 
			
			
			Spanish version 
			  
			  
			  
				
					
						| 
						April M. Short is a Bay Area 
						journalist focusing on social justice reporting. |  
			  
			  
			  
			The junk food industry
 
			is getting sneakier in its 
			tactics 
			to entice people into consuming 
			its concoctions. 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			 
 
 
			With the exposure of troubling obesity rates, outrage over 
			undisclosed genetically engineered wheat (and other) crops, the 
			successful worldwide March Against Monsanto effort in May and 
			statewide bans of GE crops that followed, the US citizenry is 
			expanding its awareness and concern about food health.
 
			  
			The junk food industry is responding by 
			getting sneakier in its tactics to entice, exploit and beguile 
			people into consuming its concoctions.
 Here are a few of the most disturbing deceptions the industry is 
			using to keep Americans hooked on its junk.
 
 
			  
			  
			1. Branding 
			Processed Foods to Look "Natural"
 
 Those grill marks on your burger? Not real.
 
			  
			They were put there by the factory, just 
			like a pre-torn blue jean purchased at a name-brand store. Junk food 
			companies are branding their foods to have a more natural, homemade 
			appearance - and the painful, Orwellian doublespeak-style irony is 
			that to do so actually requires more processing than ever.
 Rather than switch to ingredients that are actually healthier and 
			less processed, food engineers at companies with notoriously 
			processed products, namely,
 
				
					
					
					Kraft
					
					Wendy’s
					
					McDonald’s 
					
					Domino’s,  
			,,,among others - are responding to 
			concerns surrounding overly processed foods with an unhealthy and 
			deceiving facade of healthy looking foods.
 Kraft Foods engineers spent two years manufacturing a Carving Board 
			line process that would create uneven turkey slabs, and Wendy’s 
			intentionally created curvier "natural squares" out of perfectly 
			square beef chunks so the squares would appear less processed.
 
 In an article titled "Food 
			Engineers Now Making Your Burger Look Cool, Casual, Real" 
			Gawker reported:
 
				
				Similarly, the Egg White Delight 
				McMuffin at McDonald's is going for a squiggly circle rather 
				than the disturbingly perfect, round animal product disc that is 
				characteristic of the Egg McMuffin.    
				Domino's pizza churners are 
				instructed to tweak the perfect rectangles on their "Artisan 
				Pizzas" to achieve a natural crudeness of homemade pies. 
			Additionally, Gawker reports that 
			Hillshire Brands Company - deceptively known as Hillshire Farms - is 
			working to achieve the "wholesome" look.  
			  
			After customers requested a "grainer 
			appearance" of the company’s poultry wafers, their factory processes 
			began to dye the edges of the meat slices with caramel food 
			coloring.  
			  
			According to Gawker, Hillshire’s vice 
			president of marketing, Reggie Moore, said, 
				
				"it's crucial to always be adapting 
				their food chunks to fit changing standards of appearance, as 
				the definition of 'natural' changes from customer to customer." 
			
 
			2. Marketing 
			to Children Under Guise of Charity
 
 Anna Lappé is a mother and food health educator, known for 
			her work as an expert on food systems and as a sustainable food 
			advocate.
 
			  
			She spoke in March at TedX Manhattan on 
			behalf of her group, Food Mythbusters, about ways to combat 
			the fast food industry’s marketing to kids.
 According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 
			childhood obesity - proven to cause diabetes and other serious 
			health conditions - has more than doubled in the last 30 years.
 
			  
			More than a third of children and 
			adolescents were overweight or obese in 2010, and the numbers are 
			increasing. 
				
				"What children are enticed to 
				consume today has truly life-and-death consequences," Lappé told 
				AlterNet. 
			While the fast food industry reported 
			spending less on marketing to kids to the FCC, a discerning look at 
			the numbers in the report will show otherwise.  
			  
			Rather than advertise less, the industry 
			is using sneakier, less traditional channels to market to young 
			audiences, like social media, branded "advergaming" websites and "philanthro 
			marketing."
 Lappé says following her TedX Mahattan talk she received an email 
			from a concerned parent. Her third-grader’s class had taken a 
			lunchtime field trip to McDonalds to hear from Ronald the clown 
			about Ronald House Charities.
 
				
				"The trip was under guise of 
				charitable giving, but what it meant in effect was two 
				third-grade classes, during the school day, going to McDonalds 
				to eat lunch with their teachers," Lappé says. 
			Lappé says that kind of under-the-radar 
			"philanthro marketing" is a common tactic for fast food companies to 
			reach young audiences, and points out that while it exposes kids to 
			fast food brands, it is not reported as "marketing" to the FCC and 
			other regulating organizations.
 Food companies are also using the Internet and social media to keep 
			in touch with youth, including some websites, like McDonalds’ 
			Ronald.com, that are marketed to kids as young as preschool-aged.
 
				
				"They're called advergames, but 
				they're videogames embedded in websites," says Lappé. 
				 
			She adds that, while marketing to kids 
			is inherently unethical, social media marketing is worse because it 
			is under the radar and all but unregulated. 
				
				"Children are unable to distinguish 
				between what is entertainment, educational material, and 
				advertising," she says.    
				"My particular issue with social 
				media marketing to kids is that the technology around social 
				media is advancing at such a fast pace - much faster than 
				advocates can monitor it, much faster than regulators can keep 
				up with it - so that you have this space of marketing to kids 
				that’s increasingly unregulated." 
			
 
			3. 
			Manufacturing Addiction
 
 It is no coincidence that so many people are obese, and despite 
			widespread knowledge that it’s bad for you, many people continue to 
			crave junk food.
 
			  
			Junk food companies have got it down to 
			a science. They are creating "feel-good food" that is manufactured 
			to include just the right combination of the sugar, fat and salt our 
			limbic brains love.
 In his article, "The 
			Jargon of Junk Food," Paul McFedries breaks down 
			the language of the junk food industry to show just how scientific 
			and calculated the industry’s methods are for keeping people 
			addicted.
 
				
				"Processed-food companies 
				increasingly turn to their legions of scientists to produce 
				foods that we can’t resist," he writes.  
			McFedries notes that he is "indebted" to 
			New York Times reporter Michael Moss, particularly for his 
			fascinating new book Salt Sugar Fat, for many of the 
			following terms: 
				
					
					
					Pillar Ingredients - Salt, 
					sugar, and fat are the Pillar Ingredients, and the industry 
					strategically combines the three to keep you hooked.
					
					Bliss Point - If we crave pillar 
					ingredients so much, why not just crank them up as much as 
					possible? It turns out there is an optimum amount of salt, 
					sugar, or fat the human brain likes best, and it is called 
					the bliss point.
					
					Mouthfeel - This is literally 
					the way food feels inside a person’s mouth; junk food 
					industry scientists also adjust factors like crunchiness to 
					produce a mouthfeel that consumer most crave.
					
					Flavor Burst - Technologists 
					alter the size and shape of salt crystals, so that they 
					induce a flavor burst that "can basically assault the taste 
					buds into submission."
					
					Vanishing Caloric Density - 
					Underlying all junk-food science is vanishing caloric 
					density, which is the process by which the food melts in 
					your mouth so quickly that the brain is fooled into thinking 
					it is consuming fewer calories than it actually is. The 
					packaged-food scientists want to avoid triggering 
					sensory-specific satiety, the brain mechanism that tells a 
					person to stop eating when it is overwhelmed by flavors. The 
					goals are either passive overeating, which is the excessive 
					eating of foods that are high in fat because the human body 
					is slow to recognize the caloric content of rich foods, or 
					auto-eating: that is, eating without thinking or without 
					even being hungry. 
			Michael Moss interviewed 
			Jeffrey Dunn, who in 2001 directed more than half of Coca-Cola’s 
			$20 billion in annual sales as president and chief operating 
			officer.  
			  
			In the New York Times article, "The 
			Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food," Moss 
			writes: 
				
				"[Dunn] drew from the bag of tricks 
				that he mastered in his 20 years at Coca-Cola, where he learned 
				one of the most critical rules in processed food: The selling of 
				food matters as much as the food itself." 
			  
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