Morgan Spurlock's Supersize Me

Words: 891
Pages: 4

Everyone at some point has gone to McDonalds for some quick, easy, and tasty food. What most people don’t realize is the adverse effect that fast food can have on a person. Most Americans rely on fast food for up to 7 meals a week and it’s making America fat. 100 million or 60% of Americans are overweight. Also, since 1980, the total number of overweight Americans has doubled. This statistic goes along nicely with the fact that fast food chains have exploded in popularity since the 1980s. In Morgan Spurlock’s documentary Supersize, Me from 2004, Morgan tests his theory about fast food by only eating McDonalds for one month straight while travelling the country and interviewing many people. Over the course of the documentary, Supersize Me effectively …show more content…
For example, he scores an interview with the CEO of the GMA or Grocery Manufacturers of America. This company has control over middle and high school lunch programs and is a lobbyist for Coca Cola, Kellogg’s, Nestle, Hershey’s, and many other brands. In this interview, he states that GMA is part of the problem. This documentary interviews the average American. Morgan travels the country interviewing people and getting their opinion on fast food. He even goes as far as to go to a middle school in his hometown to see what they are being fed for lunch. He found that they are given the choice between healthy and very unhealthy foods and not a single kid chooses to eat healthy. Morgan goes above and beyond to show the viewer that fast food is not all that it seems. Being very in depth proves essential for this type of documentary because it leaves the audience with all sides of the story and enables them to make their own decisions. Morgan also digs deeper than anyone else has dared to dig into the world of fast food across