In recent years, a number of powerful food documentaries have set out  to pull the proverbial wool from our eyes and expose big agriculture  and the Monsanto monster for what it is. Despite the glut of information  available, however, making sense of the piecemeal data can be  confounding. Fed Up, directed by Stephanie Soechtig and narrated  by Katie Couric, is a rather cogent contribution despite covering some  familiar ground.
Fed Up focuses on childhood obesity and its concomitant  illnesses: Type 2 Diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Type 2 Diabetes  amongst adolescents has gone from being non-existent in the ’80s to a  staggering number of 57,638 cases today. The film follows three  teenagers as they struggle to lose weight.
The film does an admirable job of definitively hammering the nail  into the coffin of the “eat less, exercise more” myth of weight loss  that has permeated public consciousness for so long. The fallacy of “all  calories are the same” is conclusively laid to rest here as well, using  the example of a soft drink vs. almonds, the fiber in which causes them  to be digested qualitatively differently and cause much less of a spike  in blood sugar and insulin levels. Similarly to sodas, juices also have  no fiber, and the film argues that they’re essentially the same (makes  you want to toss your Odwallas, huh?). With that, Fed Up also  aims to squarely take on the personal responsibility model of obesity  and supplant it by the disease model of drug addiction. “Food addiction  is a biological fact,” states one of the many pundits in the film. In  the same way that drugs can hijack neural pathways, so can hyper  palatable foods (the study of the cocaine-addicted rats who consistently  chose sugar water over cocaine is referenced).
So, what is making us fat? Fed Up points the finger at sugar,  while also addressing the other co-variables. In 1977, the McGovern  Report, strongly cautioned against the consumption of refined sugars.  The sugar lobby fought vehemently against these standards, in the end  succeeding in their removal from the report. The 1980s saw the rise of  America’s obsession with a low-fat diet. The fat, predictably, was  replaced with sugar. Since 1977, daily consumption of sugar has doubled.  There are currently 600,000 products in the marketplace with sugar in  them. The pundits in the movie do bring up a very hotly-contested topic —  namely, they argue that a sugar calorie *is* a sugar calorie.  Essentially, honey is just as bad as high-fructose corn syrup, they  argue. While not exactly scientifically confirmed beyond doubt, this is  certainly food for thought. Another fallout of the low-fat fixation: the  explosion of the cheese industry. Once all the fat was removed from  milk to make it skim, the dairy industry, in a stroke of Machiavellian  genius, ramped up its cheese production, and spun cheese into the new  “protein food,” causing a huge spike in cheese sales.
Fed Up argues that while the food lobby is incredibly  powerful, the sugar lobby is especially so because with the creation of  cheap additives like high-fructose corn syrup, the companies had a  vested interested in keeping America (and especially its children)  sugar-addicted. One of the scariest statistics in the film (and there  were quite a few) is that we should be consuming between 6-9 teaspoons  of sugar a day, and most American easily eat 4 times that amount. When  the World Health Organization released its 916 TRS report in 2002, it  unequivocally identified sugar as the cause of most metabolic diseases  and set the limit to 10 percent of calories as sugar consumption. By the  time (surprise) the food lobby was done with this, the WHO was forced  to amend that to the alarmingly high 25 percent.
Fed Up also thoroughly explores the inherent conflict of  interest facing the USDA: they must safeguard public health yet promote  the food industry. It also delves into the bigger structural forces at  play: how budget cuts in the National School Lunch Program during the  Reagan era caused most school cafeterias to purchase their meals from  fast food companies and not prepare food themselves. Fed Up takes  a hard look at Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” campaign, which while  well-intentioned, just did not have the teeth to stand up to the food  company lobby which quickly cried out with reductionistic “Nanny State”  objections. By focusing mostly on one half of the problem, exercise, it  largely ignored just how badly the deck is stacked against children’s  ability to make sensible food choices. As one speaker put it rather  succinctly, “Junk is still junk even if it is less junky.” The companies  paid only so much lip service to improving their products, the film  argues. Junk food marketing, especially to children, remained  egregiously non-curtailed.
Not every data point in Fed Up is ground-breaking, but its  focus on sugar certainly is. Ultimately, the film argues that as long as  we allow private profit to be in charge of public health, we are in  trouble, but knowing the facts about what one is eating is a sure first  step in revolutionizing food industry and our role in it.
