Archive for Clearing the Carb Confusion

Food Costs Soar Here in the U.S. Why Do Americans Spend Less to Feed Themselves Than Any Other People On the Planet? TIME Has Thoughts

Food costs are on the rise, as various news outlets have reported. But we need to look deeper into this whole phenomenon, something that TIME magazine's John Cloud helps us do. The intrepid reporter offers a wonderful perspective on our food spending patterns.

In fact, he says that despite the recent price increases, "Americans still spend less to feed themselves than any other people on the planet--probably less than any monetized society in history."

What's up, Americans? Why don't we Americans care about feeding ourselves well? Why do we fork over only 9.9 cents of every dollar we spend on food when people in Britain spend 16 % of their household expenditures on food; Brazilians, 23 percent, Thais, 29 percent?

TIME magazie's John Cloud also observes that these rising food costs are due to our food being shipped great distances and gas being high. He also cites demand for ethanol triggering the price of corn to spike, and thousands of processed foods containing such derivatives like high-fructose corn syrup. (Of course, as you'll read here and in my book SUGAR SHOCK!, I'm not a fan of HFCS nor other refined sweeteners.)

In the fascinating TIME story, you'll also learn about U.S. subsidies of corn, which lead corn-dervied snacks to be well prices and convenient; "Engel's law" about how "as you get rich, you spend proportionately less to eat"; etc.

And then, a big hurrah for reporter John Cloud, because he suggests: "In short, we should stop subsidizing junk [food]." What's more he points out that healthy food, on a dollar-per-nutrient basis is not more expensive and more satiating than processed junk food. Read the TIME article now.

Thanks to Calorie Lab for Spreading the Word About The American Love Affair With Sugar

Thanks to Calorie Lab for joining in and spreading the word about the fact that Americans are just eating way too much sugar. Sarah White for the site's Calorie Counter news section discusses our love affair with the substance while summarizing the wonderful CBS News Sunday Mornng story, "Is America Too Sweet on Sugar?," which aired last Sunday.

FYI, while Calorie Lab points out that my brain fog lifted when I kicked sugar and refined carbs, that was only one of many conditions that completely vanished. In addition, my excessive fatigue, mood swings, severe PMS, ferocious headaches and other ailments also totally vanished -- just from kicking all those culprit carbs. In fact, I tell my amazing story in chapter 1 of SUGAR SHOCK! I invite you to learn about my remarkable transformation by getting my book now.

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Parents: Help Your Kids Slim Down With Famous Children’s Obesity Expert Dr. David Ludwig on July 17

Art_ludwigdavidParents, you've been besieging me for years with questions like, "How do I help my sugar-loving kids cut back on their habit?"

Or you've been repeatedly asking me, "How do I get my children to enjoy vegetables?"

Parents, I have some help for you -- so you, in turn, can help your youngsters.

I'm presenting a special teleseminar on July 17 with famous obesity expert David Ludwig, M.D., Ph.D.

Dr. Ludwig, author of Ending the Food Fight, will give you all kinds of helpful pointers to get your kids to eat more healthily, feel better, and ultimately live longer.

Art_ending_the_food_fight_51jpfnk9d

To prepare you for our exciting July 17 teleseminar, I highly recommend that you get Dr. Ludwig's must-read-for-parents book, Ending the Food Fight.

In this book -- which is written in a warm, compassionate bedside manner -- Dr. Ludwig some simple, but effective ideas to turn your kids' passion for junk food into enjoyment for healthy vegetables, fruits, etc.

If anyone is equipped to give advice to parents to help their overweigt youngstgers, it's Dr. Ludwig. He's an endocrinologist at Harvard, who has pioneered the use of a low-glycemic diet in combating obesity.

Not only that, but his groundbreaking research is the basis for some of the most successful diets of the last decade, including the South Beach Diet and Sugar Busters.

In addition, Dr. Ludwig has personally helped more than 5,000 youngsters himself. Ten years ago, he founded the Optimal Weight for Life (OWL) program at Children's Hospital Boston. There, he and his team tailored his low-glycemic diet for children and combined it with a nine-week progressive plan that benefits the patient and the entire family.

Ending the Food Fight addresses, for the first time, all three key factors affecting body weight -- biology, behavior, and environment -- and integrates them into a powerful prescription for weight loss.

And you have the rare opportunity to gain access to this cutting-edge physician. Get more info now about this exciting July 17 teleseminar with Dr. David Ludwig.Hope to see you on July 17.

Catch Me on the Michigan Talk Network’s host Michael Patrick Shields

You can listen to me at 8 am on "The Big Show" with Michael Patrick Shiels, a radio program that is aired on 12 stations statewide on The Michigan Talk Network.

We're going to talk about the recent Kellogg's story about how the company is avoiding litigation by making some changes to improve the nutritional value of their cereal. What a great topic!

Listeners of "The Big Show," write to me here and let me know that you tuned in today. The first three listeners who contact me here at my SUGAR SHOCK! Blog will receive a free teleseminar on Wed., July 17 with famous children's obesity expert David Ludwig, M.D., Ph.D., who will help you help your kids to slim down. You'll be in for a real treat!

Sweet Story! Thank You, CBS News Sunday Morning! Susan and Jason, You Deserve Kudos Galore for Your Fabulous Segment About America’s Sweetheart — Sugar

Thank you, CBS News Sunday Morning -- in particular correspondent Susan Spencer and producer Jason Sacca -- for today's very intriguing, informative lead story about sugar.

Art_susan_spencer_image526339xSusan and Jason, of course, as well as CBS, deserve major kudos for shedding light on this important subject, and I do hope and believe that CBS News Sunday Morning's five million viewers will find the segment quite eye-opening.

It's my greatest hope that the millions who saw the CBS News Sunday Morning story will reassess their intake of sugar and refined carbs and think about cutting them out -- or at least cutting back -- so they may get more energy, concentrate better, peel off the pounds, and maybe even reduce their risk of type 2 diabetes.

Wow! Susan did a spectacular job pulling together so many intriguing bits of information and then weaving them into a highly enjoyable, engrossing segment. (Susan -- who creates impressive, thoughtful stories -- really draws you in when presenting some salient facts and fascinating tidbits about Americans' love affair with sugar.)

For those of you who missed this morning's CBS News Sunday Morning segment, right now you can read the transcript of the sugar story here. (Of course, you'll miss out on the dazzling video footage, which included oodles of gooey, sugary foods; obese people waddling along; interviews with experts, including the one Susan did with me, as well as with one of my favorite experts, David Ludwig, M.D., Ph.D. (read on); sugar historian Sidney W. Mintz, author of Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History; a representative from the Sugar Association; and a crowd of about 200 gathered at my recent book signing and my signing copies of SUGAR SHOCK! at Border's at Columbus Circle in New York City.)

I'm very grateful to CBS News Sunday Morning for showcasing my book SUGAR SHOCK!, which has received, much-appreciated, pivotal support from contributing author Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D. and Nicholas Perricone, M.D., who wrote the foreword. In addition, I'm indebted to numerous bestselling authors and top health experts for endorsing the book including frequent "Oprah" guest Mehmet Oz, M.D., author of YOU: On A Diet.

Art_ludwig_9901690It was a pleasure to be included in CBS News Sunday Morning's important piece, and it was nice to see that David Ludwig, M.D., Ph.D., one of the health experts I greatly admire and recommended, was quoted in the CBS News Sunday Morning segment.

Speaking of Dr. Ludwig, mark your calendars. On Tues., July 17, this world famous children's obesity expert -- author of Ending the Food Fight -- is participating in an exciting teleseminar with me to teach parents how to help their kids slim down.

Parents, this is your amazing opportunity to ask questions of this knowledgeable expert, and we'd love to have you. Just sign up here now for this July 17 event. (Please note that the date has been rescheduled.)

For the record: While the CBS News Sunday Morning piece was absolutely fabulous, comprehensive and entertaining, I'd like to clarify some figures cited in the story.

According to the USDA, the average American consumes about 142.6 pounds per year or a little more than 3/4 of a cup per day of added caloric sweeteners, including refined sugar (from cane and beets), high fructose corn syrup, glucose syrup and dextrose. However, I believe, as do other experts, that the average American takes in more like 170 pounds per year or just shy of a cup of sugar per day. It's important to note that this 142-pound figure (or 170-pound figure) does not include artificial sweeteners, as mentioned in the CBS piece.

In fact, if you add in stats for artificially sweetened foods and drinks, the figures are considerably higher. According to the Calorie Control Council, a whopping 180 million American adults (as of 2004) consume low-calorie and sugar-free sodas, other beverages and foods using five different sugar substitutes approved by the the U.S. Food and Drug Administration—saccharin, aspartame, acesulfame-K, sucralose and neotame.

Which, of course, begs the question. Are these sugar substitutes safe to consume? This is one of the Frequently Asked Questions I answer in SUGAR SHOCK! (I had to cover this, because while researching my book, thousands of people I've been coaching or connecting with online wanted to know if they reduce their sugar intake if it's OK to drank or eat foods using sugar substitutes.)

I was shocked at what I learned. Interviews with health experts revealed that questions have been raised about the safety of all artificial sweeteners on the market -- this, despite repeated claims from the FDA and the companies creating them. In SUGAR SHOCK! you also can learn about what some experts call a "paradoxical weight gain" that some people experience when ingesting foods with artificial sweeteners.

Anyhow, back to the wonderful CBS News Sunday Morning sugar story. I recommend that you read the transcript here now.

Again, thank you CBS News Sunday Morning. Hats off to you, Susan Spencer, for your diligence, dedication and intrepid reporting. And applause goes to you, Jason, for coming up with the idea for this segment in the first place and for so seamlessly pulling together various sources and concepts for this piece. Your viewers will benefit from your hard work. It was also an honor and pleasure to work with both of you.

By the way, I'm also grateful that the CBS News Sunday Morning story featured the cover of my book in the segment. Americans are curious, which has been evident since all day SUGAR SHOCK! has been moving up the charts.

At last look, SUGAR SHOCK! soared from #3,153 around 9:15 in the morning to # 43 on Amazon late Sunday night/early Monday morning. Meanwhile, BarnesAndNoble.com also saw an upswing in sales to # 77.

Join in the movement to learn about and stop SUGAR SHOCK! now -- get this book for you, a loved one and a work colleague. I like to believe that this book can not only open your eyes, but help you to break free from your sugar habit. (That's my intention at least, and according to the dozens of e-mails I've received, it does just that.)

Thought you'd find the following interesting:

Product Details

Now here's BarnesAndNoble.com:

  • Paperback
  • ISBN: 0425213579
  • Pub. Date: December 2006
  • Sales Rank: 77
  • Customer Rating:
    Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5

Stay Tuned Sunday or Set Your TiVos to CBS News Sunday Morning’s Cover Story: “Short and Sweet”

Check out the CBS website to find a description about Sunday's cover story about sugar, on the CBS News Sunday Morning. The piece is now entitled, "Short and Sweet." Here's the item on the CBS website.

Set your TiVos now if you plan to be busy for Father's Day. Learn first where the CBS News Sunday Morning airs in your area.

FYI, you can learn more about this segment here and also here, when I first posted about my exciting day with the CBS News Sunday Morning crew.


(CBS)

(CBS) June 17, 2007

COVER STORY: Short and Sweet


Americans love their treats, from Twinkies to ice-cream to Hershey’s kisses. If it’s sweet, we love it! And in moderation, there’s nothing wrong with that. The problem is taht America has such a sweet tooth, sugar is turning up all our food, from bread to spaghetti sauce to peanut butter, and beyond. How much sugar is too much? Correspondent Susan Spencer looks into our love/hate relationship with sugar.
For more information:

www.sugarshock.com (Yeah, they posted my website.)

www.childrenshospital.org

www.sugar.org

www.usda.gov

www.healthandhealingny.org

Books:

“Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History”, by Sidney Mintz
“Ending the Food Fight” by Dr. David Ludwig, M.D.
“Sugar Shock” by Connie Bennett

CBS News Sunday Morning Airs Story About Sugar This Sunday, June 17, 2007

I'm pleased to give you an update about the sugar story that CBS News Sunday Morning is airing this Sunday, June 17, at 9 am EST and various times in other markets.

Previously, I wrote here on the SUGAR SHOCK! Blog about my exciting day with the CBS crew, when they filmed me, as well as some other sugar addicts I'd gathered. Now, here's a press release that I just wrote and am distributing.

Spread the word about this exciting sugar story that will air on CBS News Sunday Morning!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NEW YORK--Connie Bennett, author of SUGAR SHOCK!, is one of several experts appearing this Sunday on the national show, CBS News Sunday Morning, in an approximately 8-minute segment about sugar. It is the lead story, barring any breaking news.

"This is heartening that a major national TV show such as CBS News Sunday Morning is delving into this extremely important subject and telling people the truth about sugar," says Bennett, a former sugar addict, journalist and certified holistic health counselor.

"Americans need to learn that they're probably getting at least one-quarter to one-third of their calories from refined sugar and processed carbs. And they should know that consuming so many nutrient-deprived foods and drinks could lead to a host of health-damaging problems, including depression, failing memory, fatigue, headaches, heart disease, sexual dysfunction, cancer, hypoglycemia, type 2 diabetes and premature aging," adds Bennett, whose book SUGAR SHOCK! has been endorsed by a number of renowned health experts, including frequent "Oprah" guest Dr. Mehmet Oz. Bestselling author Nicholas Perricone, M.D. wrote the foreword; and Stephen T. Sinatra is the SUGAR SHOCK! contributing author.

Art_susan_spencer_image526339xThe CBS News Sunday Morning segment about sugar is reported by the talented, Emmy Award-winning journalist Susan Spencer and produced by the thorough Jason Sacca.

Other experts or self-described "sugar addicts" interviewed for the segment include:

* Children's obesity expert David Ludwig, M.D., Ph.D., author of Ending the Food Fight.

* Sugar historian Sidney W. Mintz, author of Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History.

* Melanie Miller, vice president of public relations for the Sugar Association.

* Six self-described current or former "sugar addicts" -- Bhaswati Bhattacharya, MD.; Deborah Buell, H.H.C.; Sheila Drew; Christy Goldfeder, C.H.H.C.; Moe M. Leary, H.H.C.; and Donna Sonkin, C.H.H.C.

Tune in this Sunday, June 17, at 9 am EST to CBS News Sunday Morning to watch the sugar segment.

Click here to find out where and when it airs in your market.

Look 10 Years Younger By Reducing Your Sugar Intake, New Book By Dermatologist Says

I'm always pleased when cutting-edge doctors or experts make a point to single out how a diet high in sugar could cause health woes.

Art_brandt_1about_pic_thumbSo I was, of course, intrigued when the Daily Mail informed me that dermatologist Dr. Fredric Brandt's new book, 10 Minutes/10 Years: Your Definitive Guide To A Beautiful And Youthful Appearance, points out that "sugar is enemy Number One," as the newspaper put it.

In fact, in an article titled, "The sweet truth: Ditch sugar to look ten years younger," the reporter (unnamed) points out that Dr. Brandt believes that "by simply reducing your sugar intake, you can turn back the clock by ten years and improve the texture, tone and radiance of your skin."

Right on! That's exactly my message.

Indeed, Dr. Brandt, whose clients reportedly include Madonna, Rupert Everett, Cher and Ellen Barkin, points out that a diet high in sugar can cause premature ageing.

"I promise, as soon as you cut down on sugar, you’ll see an improvement in your skin," Dr. Brandt told the Daily Mail.

"Instead of rewarding yourself with chocolate, think about rewarding yourself with improved skin and a longer, healthier life."

Hurrah to Dr. Brandt for urging people to shift their focus away from rewarding themselves with sweets to rewarding themselves with more beautiful skin and better health. In fact, his remark sounds like something I'd say, too.

Incidentally, my book SUGAR SHOCK! also delves into this sugar-skin connection. In fact, the foreword to the book is written by dermatologist Nicholas Perricone, M.D., who discusses the process of glycation and Advanced Glycation End Products (AGEs).

In addition, SUGAR SHOCK! includes a chapter, "For Your Beauty: Sugar Glutting Could Give You Pimples, Wrinkles, and More."

Again, hurrah to Dr. Brandt for helping to draw attention to the link between eating sugar and getting wrinkles or aging more quickly.

Alameda County Urges Residents to Launch On a Soda-Free Summer

Art_sodafree_logoHurrah for the folks at the Alameda County Public Health Department, which just launched the Soda-Free Summer campaign, designed to awake people to the dangers of sugary fizzy drinks and the benefits of healthy alternatives

The California community points out that soda is the # 1 source of sugar in the American diet and that one 20-ounce bottle of soda each day for a year can lead a a 25-pound weight gain.

The progressive Alameda Public Health Department also is inviting residents to enter a raffle by Aug. 31, 2007 to win a $500 healthy shopping spree — if they sign a pledge to make this a soda-free summer. (Now that's a cool idea!)

"It's time to rethink the drink," Diane Woloshin, director of nutrition services, told reporter Rebecca Vesely, who wrote an article that ran in both InsideBayArea.com and the Oroville Mercury Register..

Alameda County health officials are even pointing out that some drinks advertised as juice actually contain a lot of sugar. (The California folks are so right on -- that's exactly one of the things I point out in my book SUGAR SHOCK!)

Instead of reaching for a soda, Alameda County health officials are encouraging residents to choose other alternatives such as water, non-fat milk or sugar-free iced tea. (I'm not a fan of the recommendation to choose diet soda "once in a while.")

Now get ready for some uncanny aspects of this campaign given the title of my book, website and blog.

Alameda's Woloshin says that the "theme of the campaign is `sugar shock' because some of this information is really shocking to people."

What a cool theme, eh?! (I wonder -- do the Alameda County folks know yet about my book SUGAR SHOCK!?)

Wait, that's not all. In trying to educate people about sugary drinks, the Alameda County officials even provided some stats about soda that they're calling sugar shockers. (Whoah, talk about psychic -- I use the exact same prhase, "SUGAR SHOCKERS!," in sidebars for my book SUGAR SHOCK! Guess great minds do think alike!)

Anyhow, thanks to Google Alerts for letting me know about this wonderful program via Rebecca Vesely's article in both InsideBayArea.com and the Oroville Mercury Register.

It's time for me to track down the people in Alameda County. Clearly, they need to know about my book and work!

Wake Up Your Real Taste Buds for Luscious Goodies From Mother Nature — Forget Overly Sweet Cereals, Candies, Etc.

Americans, wake up to your real taste buds! Don't get lured or lulled into clamoring for sickeningly sweet, sugar-packed cereals, candies, yogurts, vitamin-spiked waters, protein bars and other foods.

All you need are naturally sweet fabulous treats from Mother Nature -- foods like organic, luscious strawberries, blueberries, apples, cherries, peaches, cherry tomatoes, red peppers, jicama, red snap peas, sweet potatoes, etc.

Besides, these delicious, natural, fiber-filled goodies -- which you can pick or pluck from trees or out of the ground -- are much more healthy for you and full of vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, etc. as I point out in my book SUGAR SHOCK!

The reason I have American tastebuds on my mind is because yesterday I spent much of the day Friday with a crew from CBS News (as I mentioned yesterday) and I was pointing to the unnaturally high sugar content in many packaged foods available today -- something that's not only completely unnecessary, but also quite harmful to millions. (Stay tuned, because CBS News Sunday Morning is airing an 8-to-9-minute story about sugar next Sunday, June 17. I'll give you details shortly.)

Back to American tastebuds. So this morning, after resting up from my long day and week getting ready for my interview with CBS, I received a humorous reminder of the horribly sweet cereals now heavily promoted when a Google Alert notified me that Calvin of Calvin and Hobbes fame is gung-ho about a fictional cereal, Chocolate Frosted Sugar Bombs.

Indeed, thanks to Topher's Castle, a creative, fun site for "Topher's Breakfast Cereal Character Guide," you can learn that:

"Calvin of Calvin and Hobbes fame has been known to eat Chocolate Frosted Sugar Bombs which Calvin says are `tasty, lip-smacking, crunchy-on-the-outside, chewy-on-the-inside, and they don't have a single natural ingredient or essential vitamin to get in the way of that rich, fudgy taste.' Hobbes says the cereal makes his heart skip and likens this cereal to `eating a bowl of milk duds.'"

As entertaining as that Topher's Castle entry about a fictional cereal may be -- especially the part about not having "a single or natural ingredient or essential vitamin to get in the way of that rich, fudgy taste" -- the fact remains: Our nation's poor kids are being brainwashed to develop taste buds completely out of whack.

Food corporations are training our poor children -- via tempting TV food commercials, in-store tastings, etc. -- that they need to begin their days with a blast of refined sugar!

But young people -- and adults, too, of course -- just don't need to eat all those sugary foods and refined carbs.  People NEED to know consuming all those culprit carbs could wreak havoc galore on your poor body -- it could lead to difficulty concentrating (and hence bad grades), brain fog, anxiety, depression, restlessness, mood swings, irritability and even very severe consequences like obestiy, cancer, type 2 diabetes.

By the way, Topher's Castle also spotlights other fictional, sugar-packed cereals such as:

  • TurboMan Cereal, which comes with "with pink marshmallow boosters"
  • Chocolate Frosted Frosty Krusty Flakes ("only sugar has more sugar"), which is a favorite of Krusty the clown
  • "Super Sugar Slaps," which the Slappy the Bear (from the comic strip "Jump Start" likes)

Remember: Fiction often points to a larger truth, and that's why I laud Topher's Castle for pointing out to Americans that cereals now in supermarkets today are much sweeter than they should be.

FYI, you can purchase some non-sugary cereals that are quite tasty, too. See my Sugar-Free Shopping List for details.


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