Juicing It Up Joe Cross was one made who made a choice, a choice to change. He was over a hundred pounds overweight, had an autoimmune disease that constantly got in the way of his life, and was taking loads of different medicines to fight off all his conditions that were brought on by both the weight and his autoimmune disease. So, this one man started a journey, a journey across America for sixty days drinking nothing but juice. This one man, not only saved his own life, but also through reaching out to others, began to help others begin their own journeys to a healthier, happier life. Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead is a documentary by Joe Cross directed towards to an overweight, unhealthy audience of fast-food world corporate America. …show more content…
Throughout his film, he constantly interviews people across America, asking them about their healthstyle choices and shows all peoples and their answers ranging from wanting to change their lives to loving what they eat and nothing anybody says will change that. He asks random people to try his juice, showing people that liked and thought is tasted disgusting. He was extremely consistent in showing both sides of each argument and the benefits and disadvantages of taking a juice fast. Joe Cross from the very beginning gets his audience to start asking questions about themselves. He makes his audience ask hard questions about their lifestyles and health choices and whether or not that those choices are really worth it all in the end. Joe effectively begins to answer these questions through interviewing physicians, dieticians, and through his own and others’ experiences of completing a juice fast. Joe Cross even tries to simplify things for his audience by making informational cartoons about his deteriorating health, how the human body takes in food and the benefits of a juice fast. Throughout the entire documentary, Joe gets the expert advice of qualified physicians, such as Dr. Joel Fuhrman, to break down the benefits of a juice fast and the side effects of the processed fast-food diet of the average American. Even though Joe shows all the benefits of starting a juice fast and even shows the disadvantages and the struggles of
After all the doctors tell Spurlock he is in great shape he decides to start the experiment the next day. The night before the experiment he has "The last supper" of a healthy dinner that includes vegetables and fruits to reveal to the audience that he eats healthy food on regular basis. The truth to his normal healthy lifestyle is his girlfriend who is a Vegan chef, so you can imagine the food he actually eats at home. Spurlock i a surgeon who states that the obesity is one of the main causes of death after smoking. He also interviewed a nutritionist which I think was effective because she showed how the sizes of portions of Coke and fries in fast food restaurants have gotten bigger over time. She states that even car companies now make larger holders inside the car so that big sizes Cokes could fit in. The nutritionist even explains the impact and dangers that fast food has on children and how diabetes has recently increased.
Throughout the film, there are two main focuses. These are ‘a Western diet is unhealthy’ and ‘a whole-foods, plant-based diet is the solution.’ Understanding the contextual meaning is critical to dissecting the rhetorical devices because otherwise the intent of the documentary’s creators would be hidden. Dividing instances of ethos, logos, and pathos into the two focuses allows for a clear explanation of each. Through separation, one can focus on purpose and effectiveness.
3.A. The main points I learned about this video was that the American population is suffering from a bad food diet, a sedentary lifestyle, and very fixated on treating health problems with medical drugs. I learned that people thrive on a plant diet and do not have to eat animal products in order to be healthy. I also learned that the proper food diet and physical exercise regimen can reverse many bad health conditions including multiple sclerosis and prevent many detrimental health problems like cardiovascular disease and obesity.
This documentary made me question the food I am eating - where does it come from? Is it actually good for my health? However, Scurlock’s most persuasive and memorable technique for me was pathos because I felt really sad for the people who innocently got sucked into the fast food eating epidemic in an addicting way that is as harmful as being a slave to cigarettes or drugs.
The filmmakers make sure to state their ideas, but also justify why they are correct by using real facts and practical evidence. They explain how it is important to consume real, fresh food, eat it in moderation, and opt for a mainly plant-based diet. These dietary recommendations can be backed up with scientific evidence, as they discuss how vegetables and fruit contain essential vitamins that the body needs. It is better to eat real food instead of prepackaged junk foods and processed foods that have no nutritional value. Also, overeating causes people to be overweight and accumulate fat in their bodies, which has been proven to lead to obesity and other diseases.
It was also mentioned that food industries merely aim to increase profit and marketing. Food production focuses to make food more appealing to consumers by producing their products to look, taste, and have longer shelf life (which consumers gravitate towards when making food choice.) On the other hand, to reverse the health concerns that were brought up, the documentary also provided information to aid people exercise alternatives to live healthier. For example, people should increase their organic or whole food intake and decrease processed food, have adequate sleep, and daily exercise. When an individual learns to appreciate a whole food diet, it will be easier to forgo processed food, therefore feeling happier and energized. All in all, a better diet improves emotional, mental, physical health.
This is done early in the film where he’s had his last meal that contains greens and has health written all over it and in the 30 day challenge we see him eat his last maccas meal which contains countless amounts of calories, fat, grease and sodium. He has juxtaposed these two scenes to emphasis the food choices that we as humans make and their quality of nutrition. Also in some of the earlier scenes we are given an insight into Morgan Spurlock’s childhood where we see that all of his meals are homemade by his mother…not take-out. But in comparison we are shown that the children of this day and age don’t have a clue in the world what a healthy diet is! You wonder why this matters?
In America, more people are becoming overweight or obese than ever, over 70 percent of the population. Much of this is occurring because of what the food industry is doing and because of many misconceptions in the minds of the ordinary people. These, along with other factors are generating an obesity epidemic in the USA. This documentary visits several experts and people with first-hand experiences with obesity. They bring to light many of the causes that induce people becoming obese, teach people how to avoid such things, suggest methods for restoring one's health, and reveal the benefits that come with good health and the hindrances that come with malnutrition. At the same time, it follows the fictional life of a woman as she makes the decision
After watching the PBS documentary dying to be thin I learned a number of new things about eating disorders. The affects an eating disorder can have on the human body are catastrophic in all aspects. Research shows that eating disorders start as early as eight years old in the brain. Children have the beginning ideas at about this age and by a couple years later are fully submerged in bulimia or anorexia. There are different types of eating disorders some people over eat and try to make themselves seem unattractive. While others actually control their food so greatly they lose a massive amount of weight. Either one of these types of eating disorders have negative effects on a person’s body. Unfortunately, most people suffering from eating disorders have been sexually
Juicing is a great way to provide your body with a high level of superb nutrition. A great many health conscious folks agree how amazing it is. Now you might be asking yourself, what is it about juicing that is so great?
America, now pretty much the fattest nation in the world has a major problem that has started to unfold more now than ever before. This problem deals with the fast food industry and what they are feeding us. In the documentary film "Super Size Me" the creator, Morgan Spurlock, explores and investigates into the food industry and its effects on people. This study engaged Spurlock in a thirty day study in which every single day for three times a day he would eat McDonalds. Within this thirty day period, Spurlock had to make sure he consumed every item on the menu. He also had limited exercise which was specified to the average amount a person will walk. He was also required to supersize his meal, but
My favorite part of the film is watching Morgan Spurlock forcing himself to eat McDonald’s until he vomits. It reminded me of my nephew who ate a twenty-piece chicken nugget until he got sick. I also like how the film was able to record Spurlock visit with the doctor and nutritionist. It shows how dramatically his weight has increased after eating McDonald’s for under two weeks. It is even scarier at the end of the experiment. Spurlock gained 24.5 lbs, his cholesterol level is higher, his body fat increased, his liver turned to fat, and he was twice as likely to get a heart disease. More interestingly, fast food caused him to feel depressed and exhausted. It is no wonder why fast food causes people to gain weight. It can make them feel lazy. I also liked when they interview the public and ask if they know what is calories. Surprisingly, many did not know how to explain calorie. This goes to show that many people are counting calories but not many know what it
In my opinion, the documentary captures the physical and psychological effects that this way of eating has on him. An important point of view is that the film tried to capture people who were obese and their stories, their opinions on fast food and their consumption. The documentary is about the fast food that McDonald’s sells and the effects it produces on our body’s long term. McDonald’s is the main focus of the film and Spurlock accuse McDonald’s wrong ways of selling to children by creating playgrounds and through aggressive ads, such that many children know McDonald’s clown better than
Later on, by 1920s a German scientist known as Max Gerson started a therapy which was based on using raw juices and a vegetarian diet. By 1936, another person, namely Dr. Norman Walker published a book on the benefits of the raw vegetables juicers. Known as the “Norwalk Juicer,” the book became known for its innovative view of looking at health as it relates to
Juicing is the process of extracting juice from plant tissues such as fruits and vegetables. There are numerous methods; from extracting the juice by hand or the large-scaled manufacturing processes that is used to efficiently retrieve the juice from the fruits and vegetables included in the mixture. According to Dr. Joseph Mercola, an alternative medicine proponent, there are two main reasons why the incorporation of vegetable juices are essential to improve the health of the people. First, you are able to consume the ample amount of vegetables and fruits in an efficient manner. Rather than consuming vegetables in its solid form, it is easier to digest it once it’s converted to its liquid form. Second, since the consumption of fruits and vegetables would be easier with juicing, you can add a wider variety to your own diet. As it was stated in one of his articles, that once a person repeatedly consumes the same type of vegetables and fruits every day, there is a chance to develop an allergy to a certain type of food. With juicing you may avoid this from happening by expanding the variety of fruits and vegetable you intake and at the same time explore with the variety you are available with.