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Food Inc Review

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Food, Inc. (2008)

This will change your life! For most Americans, the ideal meal is fast, cheap, and tasty. Food, Inc. examines the costs of putting value and convenience over nutrition and environmental impact. Director Robert Kenner explores the subject from all angles, talking to authors, advocates, farmers, and CEOs, like co-producer Eric Schlosser (Fast Food Nation), Michael Pollan (The Omnivore's Dilemma), Gary Hirschberg (Stonyfield Farms), and Barbara Kowalcyk, who's been lobbying for more rigorous standards since E. coli claimed the life of her two-year-old son. the present technique for crude nourishment generation is generally a reaction to the development of the fast food industry since the 1950s. The creation of nourishment, in general, has more definitely changed since that time than the few thousand years earlier. Controlled essentially by a modest bunch of multinational enterprises, the worldwide nourishment generation business - with an accentuation on the business - has as its unwritten objectives creation of extensive amounts of sustenance at low direct …show more content…

If eco-docs tends to preach to the converted, Kenner presents his findings in such an engaging fashion that Food, Inc. may well reach the very viewers who could benefit from it the most: harried workers who don't have the time or income to read every book and eat non-genetically modified produce every day. Though he covers some of the same ground as Super-Size Me and King Corn, Food Inc. presents a broader picture of the problem, and if Kenner takes an understandably tough stance on particular politicians and corporations, he's just as quick to praise those who are trying to be responsible--even Wal-Mart, which now carries organic

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