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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNetflix Documentary 'Poisoned' Reveals How Shockingly Dirty Your Food Is

Rolling Stone link: https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-reviews/netflix-doc-poisoned-the-dirty-truth-about-your-food-contamination-1234798703/
SO YOURE HUNGRY, and you want to eat something healthy. Maybe a salad. Whoops. Romaine lettuce and spinach are prolific carriers of foodborne pathogens (a 2006 baby spinach contamination led to a severe E. coli outbreak). OK, so maybe a chicken sandwich. Not so fast: It remains industry practice to sell raw chicken infected by salmonella. How about a wholesome peanut butter sandwich? Well, peanuts, too, have a bad salmonella history.
Such is the hazard of watching Poisoned: The Dirty Truth About Your Food, a sobering new Netflix documentary that makes eternal fasting seem like a really good option. Fastidious, even-keeled and concerning, its an alarming reminder to watch what you eat, at least if you want to stick around and stay healthy. Directed by Stephanie Soechtig, who previously examined Americas obesity epidemic in the documentary Fed Up, and based on the book by ace narrative journalist Jeff Benedict, Poisoned favors reporting and analysis over shock emotional appeal, although theres plenty to get angry about here. The film brings into sharp focus issues that linger at the periphery of the national consciousness, inconvenient truths about the dangers inherent to what we eat, and the negligence of those responsible for regulation. Its the story of a broken system that often places profit over public health and safety.
Poisoned takes its place in a tradition that includes The Jungle, Upton Sinclairs muckraking 1906 exposé of the meatpacking industry, and Fast Food Nation, Eric Schlossers 2001 nonfiction book first serialized in the pages of Rolling Stone that was adapted into a narrative feature film directed by Richard Linklater. The fast food connection is pertinent: Poisoned opens with the E. coli outbreak that killed four children who ate contaminated Jack in the Box burgers in 1992 and 1993. The fallout led to landmark regulation that improved fast food safety, but Poisoned makes the case that much of the food industry has lagged woefully behind.
The film speaks truth to power, quite literally when Soechtig puts corporate executives and government regulators on camera to tap-dance their way around pointed questions and carefully recorded data. Sometimes the manufacturers of food dont think of it as food, explains the attorney Bill Marler, who has made it his lifes mission to hold the food industrys feet to the fire. It becomes a commodity. If Poisoned has a protagonist it is Marler, an unflappable, roll-up-the-sleeves sort who began his journey by representing one of the young victims in the Jack in the Box outbreak. An honorable mention goes to Kenneth Kendrick, a former Peanut Corporation of America plant manager who blew the whistle on his boss, PCA owner Stewart Parnell, when he learned Parnell knowingly altered inspection records and shipped out contaminated nuts. In 2014, Parnell was convicted of conspiracy, mail and wire fraud and the sale of misbranded food, and sentenced to 28 years in federal prison.
Such is the hazard of watching Poisoned: The Dirty Truth About Your Food, a sobering new Netflix documentary that makes eternal fasting seem like a really good option. Fastidious, even-keeled and concerning, its an alarming reminder to watch what you eat, at least if you want to stick around and stay healthy. Directed by Stephanie Soechtig, who previously examined Americas obesity epidemic in the documentary Fed Up, and based on the book by ace narrative journalist Jeff Benedict, Poisoned favors reporting and analysis over shock emotional appeal, although theres plenty to get angry about here. The film brings into sharp focus issues that linger at the periphery of the national consciousness, inconvenient truths about the dangers inherent to what we eat, and the negligence of those responsible for regulation. Its the story of a broken system that often places profit over public health and safety.
Poisoned takes its place in a tradition that includes The Jungle, Upton Sinclairs muckraking 1906 exposé of the meatpacking industry, and Fast Food Nation, Eric Schlossers 2001 nonfiction book first serialized in the pages of Rolling Stone that was adapted into a narrative feature film directed by Richard Linklater. The fast food connection is pertinent: Poisoned opens with the E. coli outbreak that killed four children who ate contaminated Jack in the Box burgers in 1992 and 1993. The fallout led to landmark regulation that improved fast food safety, but Poisoned makes the case that much of the food industry has lagged woefully behind.
The film speaks truth to power, quite literally when Soechtig puts corporate executives and government regulators on camera to tap-dance their way around pointed questions and carefully recorded data. Sometimes the manufacturers of food dont think of it as food, explains the attorney Bill Marler, who has made it his lifes mission to hold the food industrys feet to the fire. It becomes a commodity. If Poisoned has a protagonist it is Marler, an unflappable, roll-up-the-sleeves sort who began his journey by representing one of the young victims in the Jack in the Box outbreak. An honorable mention goes to Kenneth Kendrick, a former Peanut Corporation of America plant manager who blew the whistle on his boss, PCA owner Stewart Parnell, when he learned Parnell knowingly altered inspection records and shipped out contaminated nuts. In 2014, Parnell was convicted of conspiracy, mail and wire fraud and the sale of misbranded food, and sentenced to 28 years in federal prison.
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Oh my, I don't think I'll ever eat anything again.
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Netflix Documentary 'Poisoned' Reveals How Shockingly Dirty Your Food Is (Original Post)
FakeNoose
Aug 2023
OP
Its a wonder any of us survive.
Big Blue Marble
(5,703 posts)2. Nothing changes in our food supplies until we come to consciousness
that we, the buyers are not the customers, the investors are who only cares about returns.
As long as the profit flow. nothing changes.