In the essay “Don't blame the eater”, David Zinczenko talks about fast food restaurant being the cost of obesity among youth and children. The food fast restaurant across the nation are, to many, the only way they can eat because of the price of their meals. The fast food restaurants are the only options for young people whose parents are often at work during the day. These young people do not know the dangers of consuming these foods on a regular basis. The problem is that most of these young people do not know the dangers of eating such meals on a regular basis, such as (being very overweight), high cholesterol, and ( a disease where blood sugar swings wildly).…
They say that you need to take personal responsibility for the food you chose to eat. David Zinczenko states in “Don’t Blame the Eater” that “Shouldn’t we know better than to eat two meals a day in fast-food restaurants? ”(392). The parents drive their children there knowing eating…
David Zinczenko’s essay, “Don’t Blame the Eater,” (New York Times, November 23, 2002) emphasizes the idea that the large conglomerates may be held accountable for some legal responsibility for the skyrocketing rate of obesity in America within children. He uses anecdotal evidence from his past to argue that it is not the consumer’s fault that they are experiencing health issues, it is the multinational corporations that own the most well known fast food restaurants. Zinczenko starts by saying that he has been a victim of these large conglomerates as a younger boy. He states that he had a daily task of choosing where to have his lunch and dinner between four well-known fast food chains. Zinczenko also shares that he lost…
In the article, “Don’t Blame the Eater by David Zinczenko” discussing the major topics of the article about the corporations, consumers, and nutrition values. The majority point about the article is about fast food corporations, lack of time & nutrition, and consumers falling into the deception of fast food. Another major key of the article, about the child being neglected and set up for failure. In my proposition of agreeing with the author “David Zinczenko” arguing about the fast food corporation corrupting America society with improper food.…
In David Zinczenko’s Don’t Blame the Eater, he criticizes the fast food industry's failure to provide nutrition information and the resulting consequences in the American health and legal systems. He argues that we should not blame kids for eating unhealthily but instead look to the fast food industry as the problem. Kids are suing McDonalds because they are overweight and the author has had a similar experience growing up. The problems with kids eating too much has become a national crisis and causing an increase in childhood diabetes. One reason this problem is so serious is that there isn’t any alternative, it’s cheap, and healthy food…
In David Zinczenko’s Don’t Blame the Eater article, he blames the fast-food industry for starting the rising obesity problem because of the failure of providing the facts and warnings labels about their high calorie junk food to the consumers. Zinczenko argues that kids are drawn by the cheap, high-calorie junk food that the fast-food chains like McDonald’s, Taco Bell, Kentucky Fried Chicken, or Pizza Hut are happy to supply because with lots of parents working all day, they do not have time to check what their children are eating. For Example, the author David Zinczenko states that when he was a little boy, his mother would always be away at work, so he would eat Taco Bell, McDonald’s, and at other places every day, and he ended up obese.…
According to his article, “The Battle Against Fast Food Begins In The Home”, the author, columnist and blogger Daniel Weintraub, argues parents, not fast-food companies or the government are responsible for their child's health and well being. Weintraub supports this claim by providing data from the Center For Public Health Advocacy on the subject of overweight schoolchildren, State law recommendations outlining nutritional standards, and his own experience with the problem. Weintraub intends to convince or persuade the parents or parent to accept the blame for their overweight child. From my standpoint, however, it is clear the parents or parent should not be the only ones to blame for the increasing weight problems children were dealing with, and are still currently dealing with today.…
David Zinczenko is the editor-in-chief of Men’s Health magazine and the author of numerous best-selling books. Zinczenko is a man known for his work; his work and credibility shines bright because he has contributed op-ed essays to the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and USA Today. He has also appeared on Oprah, Ellen, 20/20, and Good Morning America. The fact that he is so accomplished in the area of eating healthy shows just how credible he is when it comes to discussing fast food vs. the eater. Zinczenko believes that the fast food industry is partly at fault for the growing rate of obesity. Although Zinczenko’s background and accomplishments gives us the evidence we need to know in order to trust his judgments, his emotional way of getting his points across make a difference as well. In the beginning of the essay, Zinczenko tells us about himself and how he grew up with troubled parents who weren’t together, and with very little options of what to eat for lunch and dinner every day. He explains that his options were mainly fast food, which caused him to be an overweight teenager. In other words, he uses his story of himself as a teenager growing up with family problems to draw people in and get them to sympathize with the overweight teenagers and get them to see that it is not all their fault and that it is, in fact, partly the fast food industry’s fault. One of his final arguments is that without warning labels on fast food industry products, we will see more sick, obese children and more angry parents.…
Even thought David Zinczenko and Radley Balko take two different approaches on whom should be blamed for obesity, they are actually in agreement that people should become more responsible with what they eat. This common ground becomes clear through Radley Balko argues its personal responsibility to choose what they out in their mouths, while David Zinczenko argues there should be more alternatives for the youth to eat then fast food. Both authors have great point about responsibility and alternative. Obesity should come to an end before it continues putting end to people’s life.…
Fast food restaurants target young children and teenagers as their main consumers due to the fact that most kids enjoy cheap, flavorful, readily available food. However, due to the rising statistics of childhood obesity, type II diabetes has become a common disease amongst young children, and the Center of Disease Control and Prevention approximates that 100 billion dollars a year are being spent on health care for diabetes (Zinczenko 154). Fast food restaurants are a large contributor to the blame for these sickening statistics, but because David Zinczenko’s essay was written in 2002, those statistics cannot be used as a reliable source to blame for diabetes in the year 2010. For example, because our economy has faced a massive economic downturn, the increase in the cost of health care has sky-rocketed, which has led American’s to fend for themselves and try to make ends meet. Diabetes has become a human awareness among many American’s along with health care. Diabetes can be developed due to genetics or the mere lack of insulin the body produces. Obesity could have a small effect on this disease, but cannot be responsible for all thirty percent of accounts. (Zinczenko 154). Even though I agree that diabetes and the price of health care have been presented as a rising issue in our economy, I cannot agree with Zinczenko on the topic that overworking parents are unable to supply healthy alternatives to their…
In the article “If You Pitch It, They Will Eat It”, David Barboza, who works for the New York Times, claims that, “Product tie-ins are everywhere. There are SpongeBob SquarePants Popsicles, Oreo Cookie preschool counting books and Keebler’s Scooby Doo Cookies” (Barboza). While his claim seems accurate, consumers still have the power to control the market. Parents can control what their kids watch everyday on TV, and if nobody is eating unhealthy, then the fast food restaurants will have to adjust their menus to reflect more healthy options. In “The Battle Against Fast Food Begins In The Home”, the solution in author David Weintraub’s family was to limit television time and encourage the kids to spend more time outdoors (Weintraub). In David Zinczenko’s article, he shared his story that he was already more than 200 pounds at the age of 15 (Zinczenko). Additionally, David Barboza claims that, “Kids 4 to 12 spend on their own wants and needs about $30 billion a year” (Barboza). Parents often pacify their children with unhealthy snacks, which shows that consumer demand allow companies to continue selling their products. Therefore, the consumers are at fault of for America's…
The McDonald's Corporation wants to be everywhere that children are. The number of obese children has more than doubled since 1980. Many people blame the fast food industry for making the people of America fat. Most of the people in America blames the companies for selling their unhealthy food, advertising and promoting their food to young children, and creating super sized servings. Having said that, there are people who believe that it is the person's fault for being an unhealthy and obese person. Weintraub's article “The Battle Against Fast Food Begins in the Home”, argues that America shouldn't be blaming the fast food industry or the government, but instead the parents. Weintraub explains how it's the parent's responsibility for their own child's health and I agree with him.…
In David Zinczenko’s article “Don’t Blame the Eater,” first published on November 23, 2002 in the New York Times: Zinczenko argues that children have no other affordable choice to fast food which leads to health problems and health cost. Specifically, Zinczenko came from a split home, dad went his way and mom worked long hours, lunch and diner was a choice of numerous fast food restaurants where the affordable option. The author joined the Navy Reserves used a health magazine to learn to manage his diet. Zinczenko’s view is most won’t turn their lives around as he did and will have a lifetime of obesity. He elaborates the problem is just not the obese but…
In the world today one major problem is obesity. Who is to blame for obesity, the food industries or the parents? Yes we all will have a McDonalds sandwich every now and then, but is that what is truly the problem for kids obesity today? Parents may think they aren't the ones giving their kids a lot of horrible foods, but secretly they are. School lunches and fast food is just part of the problem, parents are the real reason for the worlds problem. Kids learn from their parents, how to eat, talk, walk, anything. Well not eating a good, healthy, supportive diet then our children will catch on and soon think they don’t have to eat. So if adults don’t eat vegetables and fruit and overall a good healthy diet then soon the young generation will…
Who is to blame in the rising epidemic of childhood obesity? Some critics say the large corporations are at fault because they trick you into consuming their products. Others say it’s the consumers fault because ultimately the consumer has the last say in what he or she eats. Weintraub is correct in his article when explaining that the parent is at fault because they are responsible for purchasing the food.…