Super Size Me
The Man Who Ate McDonald's Faces Corporate Backlash
When Morgan Spurlock stuffed himself with junk
food until his doctors begged him to stop, he threw an industry into a
super-size crisis. Now a fierce corporate counter-attack has begun.
By Andrew Gumbel, The lndependent/UK
June 19, 2004,
http://news.independent.co.uk/low_res/story.jsp?story=533053&host=3&dir=70
A few days into his grand experiment of eating all
McDonald's, all the time, for 30 days straight, the New York film-maker Morgan
Spurlock started complaining of headaches and other unpleasant side-effects:
listlessness, depression, chest pains, shortness of breath, sexual dysfunction
and more. His headaches, however, almost certainly pale in comparison to the
giant, throbbing one his much-discussed documentary Super Size Me is causing the
executives who run Ronald McDonald's global empire.
More than five weeks after it was released in the
United States, the film is playing on more screens than ever - 230 nationally
and expanding every week - and has racked up more than $7.5m (?4m) in domestic
box office receipts, more than100 times more than it cost to make.
Instead of suffering the usual fate of
documentaries - a limp roll-out in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco,
followed by oblivion and late-night television reruns - Super Size Me is showing
every sign of being a bona fide hit, especially with teenagers, the very
demographic so hotly sought out by McDonald's marketing managers.
Every night, audiences are confronted with the
sight of Spurlock's alarmingly deteriorating health as he shovels one McDonald's
meal into his mouth after another. He eats McDonald's for breakfast, lunch and
dinner, vowing to try everything on the menu at least once in the course of his
experiment, minimizing his physical exercise (in keeping with the relative
immobility of the average American) and agreeing that he will "super size" the
portions he orders whenever the server suggests it to him (again, in accordance
with the proclivities of regular fast-food customers).
For the final 15 minutes of the screening I
attended earlier this week, film-goers revolted by the sight of one too many Egg
McMuffins and super-sized side orders of fries were groaning and writhing in
their seats. A food industry lobbyist who defended McDonald's was booed when he
made the last of several appearances on screen.
By this point, Spurlock was being told by his
doctors that his cholesterol was shooting off the charts, his liver was turning
to pat? and he risked meeting the same terminally self-destructive fate as
Nicolas Cage's alcoholic protagonist in Leaving Las Vegas. The damage was far
beyond anything Spurlock's trio of specialists had imagined possible, and they
begged him (in vain) to abandon his stunt.
To say this is a public relations disaster for
McDonald's is a gross understatement. It is a nightmare that shows no signs of
ending. Spurlock has - almost literally - regurgitated the contents of his
high-fat, high-sugar diet on to the collective desks of McDonald's management,
and they appear to be at a loss as to what to do about it.
For the first five weeks, they restricted their
responses to little more than a generic observation that overeating is bad on
any diet. No doubt they reasoned that kicking up a bigger fuss would generate
further publicity for the movie. But that hush-hush strategy clearly has not
worked, and the company has now begun to fight back in more vigorous fashion.
The chosen battleground is not the US but Australia, where Super Size Me was
released earlier this month and broke national box office records with its
opening weekend receipts.
"If someone from America produces a film, and then
comes out to Australia and attacks us, I'm not going to take that sitting down,"
the chief executive of McDonald's Australia, Guy Russo, said earlier this week.
Mr Russo has himself taken the leading role in a
series of television advertisements in which he tackles Spurlock head on and
calls him "stupid" for eating a solid junk food diet for 30 days in a row. In a
flurry of newspaper and television interviews, Mr Russo has explained how he was
enraged on seeing the film earlier this month.
"No one eats McDonald's food three times a day,
every day, and no one should," he told the Melbourne newspaper The Age. (He
himself says he eats his own company's meals at least three times a week, and
has done for the past 30 years.) "We believe, and have always believed, that
McDonald's can be eaten as part of a well-balanced diet. What Mr Spurlock set
out to do, which was to double his daily calorie intake, deliberately not
exercise and over-eat, was totally irresponsible."
In an offensive predicated on charm as well as
full-frontal attack, Mr Russo has also argued that McDonald's takes the issue of
obesity very seriously, having introduced salads, low-fat breakfasts and
nutritional labeling in the past 18 months.
To date, McDonald's has not challenged the factual
content of Super Size Me, only its point of view and interpretation. But that,
too, could be about to change, after Mr Russo complained in an interview with
Sky TV that Spurlock was "providing false claims to Australians".
He did not spell out what those false claims might
be, and both Spurlock and the film's Australian publicists have taken great
pleasure in pointing out that Mr Russo's opinions on the point appear to have
undergone a radical change. "Less than two weeks ago when I was in Brisbane,"
Spurlock shot back a few days ago, "he and I did an interview together on a
radio station where he said the movie was important because it highlighted the
obesity epidemic."
Whatever the rights and wrongs of these points of
view, it is clear that a propaganda war is in progress, and that something made
Mr Russo decide that playing nice wasn't working. But playing nasty is having
boomerang effects of its own.
The Australian distributor, Dendy Films, reacted
to the McDonald's television advertising campaign by claiming that cinema
managers were having to spend longer cleaning up auditoriums where Super Size Me
has been showing because people alarmed by the dangers of bad eating presented
on screen were leaving behind full cartons of popcorn and soda cups. In a less
contentious climate, it is probably not something it would have bothered to put
out in a press release. Dendy also offered a free ticket to the film for any
employee of McDonald's Australia. Spurlock, meanwhile, has taken issue with Mr
Russo's nutrition labeling claims, saying that the posted signs at point of
purchase - which Mr Russo said were his "commitment" in the interview they did
together - were not evident in most Australian outlets of McDonald's.
From the fast-food industry's point of view, there
was probably never going to be a good time for a film like Super Size Me. It has
hit McDonald's not quite at the worst time - that would have been 18 months ago,
when the company posted its first ever quarterly loss and its share price lost
three- quarters of its value - but at something very close to it.
When Super Size Me had its debut in January at the
Sundance Film Festival, where it picked up an award for documentary directing,
McDonald's had just pulled itself out of a hole caused by over-aggressive
expansion, growing complaints about customer service, concerns about obesity, a
volley of lawsuits filed against the fast-food industry and - to cap it all -
fears of mad cow disease.
The company had already recognized it needed to do
something about the health liability of its products. In addition to the salads
and yogurt breakfasts introduced in Australia and elsewhere, it added low-fat
milk and sliced fresh apples to its menus in the US, the UK and elsewhere. The
revamp worked, at least financially, and soon McDonald's executives were hailing
their turnaround hero, the chief executive, Jim Cantalupo, as a visionary and
genius on a par with the company's founder, Ray Kroc. Or they did until Mr
Cantalupo dropped dead of a heart attack in April - hardly the best publicity
for a fast-food company on a health kick.
One of the most galling aspects of Super Size Me,
from the company's viewpoint, must have been its illustration of the calorie and
sugar content of even these new "healthy" items. The film demonstrates - using
McDonald's own nutritional data - that some of the salad dressings are as bad as
anything else on the menu. The Caesar salad with chicken premi?re, for example,
contains more fat than a cheeseburger.
Remarkably, just six weeks after Sundance,
McDonald's announced that the super-sizing that Spurlock reacts to so vehemently
in the film (his first encounter with a mega-portion of fries and Coke ends up
on the asphalt of the drive-through parking lot, along with a double quarter
pounder he couldn't quite bring himself to finish) was to be phased out by the
end of this year. Even more remarkably, the company insisted the decision had
nothing to do with the film, but had been under consideration for several
months.
Another McDonald's announcement came on the very
eve of Super Size Me's US release on 6 May: the introduction of the "Go Active
Happy Meal", complete with salad, free exercise manual and a Stepometer for
customers to monitor their daily walking regime. Again, the company insisted the
timing was a coincidence.
Not everyone in the food industry has responded so
bashfully. Even before the Australian counter-attack, an outfit called the
American Council on Science and Health started ripping into Super Size Me in a
series of press releases, op-ed pieces and capsule opinions offered by purported
dietary and health experts. Another organization, called Tech Central Station,
offered itself as a clearing house of opinion and factual evidence, condemning
Spurlock's film as a scurrilous, misleading, "disgusting", "dangerous" and
"dishonest" piece of work.
The American Council on Science and Health has not
publicly disclosed its corporate donors since 1991, but in the past they have
included crisp manufacturers, chocolate manufacturers, Burger King and Coca Cola
(a business partner of McDonald's). Tech Central Station, meanwhile, is backed
by the oil giant ExxonMobil, General Motors and, yes, McDonald's.
One op-ed piece, by the food industry lobbyist Jim
Glassman, made its way into a couple of US papers, including the St Louis Post
Dispatch, which apologized after it discovered his direct links to McDonald's.
But the counter-spinning goes on. One documentary
maker, Soso Whaley, has filmed her own 30-day McDonald's diet and claims it did
her no harm whatsoever. Her corporate backers: Philip Morris, the tobacco
company, ExxonMobil and Coca Cola.
? 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
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