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07 Nov 2010 11:53

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Biz: Healthy? Yeah, right. The government’s pro-cheese efforts

  • As a culture, our cheese-eating is way higher than it should be. Yeah, it’s tasty, and we know how tough of a habit it is to break (looks down at stomach), but we’ve gotten hooked on it as a culture at large. But the thing you should be really scared about? That, with the help of the government, the dairy industry is pushing us to eat even more of it. Dairy Management, Inc., a government-created industry marketing group, has been pushing for more cheese in foods, even as our culture has slowly been switching to low-fat or even plant-based forms of milk. Some more details:
  • 33 number of pounds of cheese the average American eats yearly source
  • bad That 33 pounds number is triple what the average American ate back in the 1970s, when the culture was cheesier in general.
  • worse Cheese is a key source of saturated fat, that kind of really safe fat that’s linked to heart disease and high calories.
  • worser Dairy Management has been promoting eating more cheese as a form of weight-loss, even though that’s not true.
  • The government feeds big dairy… Dairy Management is a very powerful group, and has been closely tied to both the Bush and Obama administrations. They have a budget of around $140 million, mostly from fees the government forces on the dairy industry, along with some money directly from the Agriculture Department. This is despite the public get-healthy face that folks like Michelle Obama have pushed in recent years. Not so much.
  • … And we just eat it up In recent years, Dairy Management’s efforts have led to new products such as Domino’s pizza relaunch (which had way more cheese), Taco Bell’s quesadillas (which have eight times more cheese than any other item on their menu), and cheesy burgers from Wendy’s and Burger King. In 2007 alone, their efforts led to an increase in cheese sales of 30 million pounds. You feel guilty now, don’t you?
  • » Are you a cheese-snacking fanatic? All of this underlines the big problem: The Agriculture Department is both the regulator and the government group that pushes the economic engine of the farming and dairy industries. This is very problematic for a lot of reasons. By the way, one group that Dairy Management is specifically focusing on: Families who eat lots of cheese and don’t really worry about the health qualms. That’s who these crap food products are marketed towards. Perhaps you should consider ordering your next sandwich without cheese.

30 Jan 2010 17:41

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Music: Our Saturday Mixtape plays Delilah with your soft-rock favorites

  • We know, we know. This isn’t the indie rock that we usually put in this space, but after listening to Phil Collins again earlier this week, we felt it was high time to give into our guilty pleasures. Julius is extra guilty about the Cutting Crew, by the way. Here’s this week’s list:

  • 1. “Against All Odds,” this song is a stone-cold classic. Somehow, a song drenched in cheese and epic hugeness like this Phil Collins classic became something of a cultural touchstone, and Collins himself – a drummer for one of the weirdest bands of the ’70s, Genesis – a pop star of the MTV era. In the process, he also neutered Genesis, but you can’t win ’em all.
  • 2. Cutting Crew just died in our arms. We were trying to resuscitate them, but for some reason the crew wouldn’t move anymore. The band, strangely enough, is still around, although nobody knows any of their songs besides this one.
  • 3. It’s pretty funny that Todd Rundgren, that oddball of ’70s rock, started out his career sounding like a Carole King wannabe. (OK, he did have a couple of years in the Nazz, but that doesn’t count.) He hasn’t been this remotely good since, not even when he released a song called “I Hate My Frickin’ ISP” back in 2000.
  • 4. Everything about 10cc doesn’t suggest this song. The airy pop of “I’m Not In Love” is kind of an anomaly in the band’s career. They were an art-rock band through and through, with periods (before this hit) of playing bubblegum pop and (after this hit) creating some early music video breakthroughs – both under different names.
  • 5. Hall & Oates is the cheese-pop band of choice for indie rockers, with its pop-drenched Philly soul somehow standing out above the fray from its era. Sure, it’s dated, but the falsettos on “Sara Smile” are less dated than Michael Bolton and Richard Marx.