Hardly happy meals
When filmmaker Morgan Spurlock nearly ate himself to death last year, little did he know that his diet would become a fast-food flashpoint. He merely congratulated himself for having, as a friend put it, âa really great bad idea.â
âItâs one of those things thatâs so easy, so simple, nobody else had thought of it, and it dealt with something that was so topical,â Spurlock says. âI couldnât turn on the TV, I couldnât open up the paper without reading about the obesity crisis.â
The idea? In February 2003, the strapping 33-year-old American male with a big voice, a Fu Manchu and the demeanor of a jock went on a strictly McDonaldâs diet for 30 days -- breakfast, lunch and dinner -- and documented it for a film he calls âSuper Size Me,â which opens here May 7.
One of the rules he set for himself was that if a McDonaldâs employee asked if he wanted a super-size, he had to take it. Another was that he would exercise no more than the average person, which is to say hardly at all. Prior to embarking on this âjourney,â as he calls it, Spurlock had his baseline medical condition documented by a trio of specialists.
After three weeks of cheeseburgers and Chicken McNuggets, Spurlock was falling apart. Heâd gained more than 20 pounds and his cholesterol had shot up 65 points. He was suffering from âMcGurgles,â âMcGas,â a fatty liver, asthma, chest pains, heart palpitations, sugar/caffeine highs and lows and sexual dysfunction. (His girlfriend, Alexandra Jamieson, a vegan chef, of all things, said, âHe gets tired easily.â)
âBy day 21, I was scared to death,â Spurlock says. âYouâre seeing things as I felt them. Youâre hearing me talk to the doctors and getting my reactions as the doctor is telling me Iâm going to be like Nicolas Cage in âLeaving Las Vegas.â He killed himself [with alcohol] in a couple of weeks. Could something really bad have happened? Absolutely.â
Some have credited Spurlockâs documentary, which won the documentary directing award at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, with influencing McDonaldâs. The company has announced that by the end of this year, it will have scaled back its super-size 42-ounce sodas to 32 ounces and the super-size 7-ounce fries to 6 ounces. Now it remains to be seen whether the rest of the fast-food industry will follow suit.
Regardless, the current downsizing and diet debates no doubt will affect the filmâs theatrical prospects.
âI think that it further legitimized the movie,â Spurlock says. âThe movie has helped change the menu.â
McDonaldâs doesnât agree. âSuper Size Meâ âhad nothing to do with it,â says McDonaldâs spokesman Walt Riker, who thinks of Spurlock as a Johnny-come-lately on the dietary scene. âThe super-size issue was vetted in 2003. Documents went out at the end of 2003 to our owners about the phaseout.â
Enlightening entertainment
Spurlock has been called the Michael Moore of fast food. Like Moore with his films âRoger & Meâ (about corporate downsizing) and âBowling for Columbineâ (Americaâs gun culture), heâs found an entertaining way to push a hot-button issue, in this case a looming health crisis brought about by expanding waistlines. Obesity is second only to cigarette smoking as a killer of Americans. Two out of three adults and 9 million children are overweight. Nearly 300,000 people die of obesity-related illnesses each year. The estimated social costs are $117 billion a year. The House of Representatives has passed whatâs been called a âcheeseburger billâ and the states are offering up âbaby McBillsâ to shelter the fast-food industry from litigation that has sprung up around this health catastrophe.
Just such a lawsuit got Spurlock thinking about making this film. He was lolling about his parentsâ house one Thanksgiving when he saw a TV report about a pair of girls who sued McDonaldâs for contributing to their obesity-related health problems. It wasnât the suit itself that set him off. (He thought at the time that consumers freely make choices, though heâs not so sure about that now, especially with respect to children.) It was the food companiesâ response to it.
âRepresentatives of the food companies came forward and said, âYou canât link our food to these kids being sick, you canât link our food to these kids being obese, our food is nutritious, itâs part of a balanced diet, it is good for you,â â says Spurlock, a confirmed carnivore and an occasional eater of fast food. âI was like, âIf itâs that good for me, I should be able to eat it all the time.â â
âAny credible fitness expert will tell you eating 5,000 calories a day is not a good idea,â says Riker, who eats at McDonaldâs once a week (two hamburgers, two apple pies) and weighs 150 pounds. âOur customers are smart. They donât need a movie to tell them whatâs best for them.â
Spurlock called up his friend, Scott Ambrozy, who said, âThatâs a really great bad idea.â He immediately went into production, with Ambrozy moving in with Spurlock and Jamieson to begin filming. The financing came from the proceeds of an MTV show Spurlock and his production company, the Con, did called âI Bet You Will,â in which people do all sorts of things for money. Spurlock also served as on-air host of the show, so he was comfortable in front of a camera.
In fact, Spurlock has an eclectic career as a producer and a performer.
He was raised in West Virginia and was a ballet dancer until age 13. He applied to the film school at USC, was rejected, and went to New York Universityâs Tisch School of the Arts, graduating in 1993. Off-campus, he performed stand-up in comedy clubs and studied improv. After graduation, he worked as a production assistant for such filmmakers as Woody Allen and James Cameron.
A friend urged him to audition to be a national spokesman for Sony Electronics. He won the part and spent the next two years as a frontman for the company. He then segued into the Sony-sponsored Bud Light Pro Beach Volleyball League, where he called matches. He also called beach volleyball at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta and was ESPNâs face of extreme sports. By 1999, he had set up his own production company and started doing music videos and industrials for Sony.
When the idea for âSuper Size Meâ came to him, he was more than ready to embark on a feature of his own. Thatâs not to say Spurlock didnât have a number of hurdles to surmount. Chief among them was the perception that this was just a stunt.
âThis is medically significant because itâs the worldâs first instance of fast-food hepatitis,â says one of Spurlockâs doctors, Dr. Daryl Isaacs. On the other hand, he adds, âItâs not really a fair experiment at all. One can take from it that fast food in large quantities is dangerous, but thereâs no correlation between what we see on a daily basis and what happened to him.â
âPeople came in thinking, âOh, this [idiot] is eating at McDonaldâs for 30 days and thatâs all it is,â â Spurlock says. âBut as I started doing the research and devising how it was going to take shape, the story started to find its own life outside of the stunt. My journey is very food-based, but I think the problem is beyond fast food. McDonaldâs is used in my film as an icon. They represent every food, every chain, every entity that is now everywhere in America.â
âBrave, disgusting and funnyâ
To flesh out the concept, Spurlock traveled the country, interviewing former U.S. Surgeon General David Satcher, U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy G. Thompson, âDiet for a New Americaâ author (and Baskin-Robbins heir) John Robbins, and a variety of Big Mac consumers, including children who couldnât recognize a photo of President Bush or a drawing of Jesus but could recognize a likeness of Ronald McDonald. He also contacted Eric Schlosser, whose book âFast Food Nationâ catapulted the obesity crisis into the American consciousness, though scheduling conflicts prevented them from getting together.
âI thought it was very brave and very disgusting and very funny,â Schlosser says of the film. âItâs brave in that itâs a full-on assault on the company, which despite its cheery face is very mean and very litigious.â
Riker scoffs at this characterization of McDonaldâs, but Spurlock was cognizant that he had to cover himself legally. He made repeated calls to McDonaldâs for comment. None was forthcoming.
Thus far McDonaldâs hasnât filed any legal action against Spurlock or the film. Certainly the companyâs clout was a factor as Spurlock sought to sell the film. Many of the studios circling âSuper Size Meâ at Sundance had corporate ties to McDonaldâs. Ultimately, he decided to go with Samuel Goldwyn. The film also will air on Showtime.
Meanwhile, Spurlock is developing a TV spinoff of the film -- âbefore anyone else can,â he says -- called â30 Days,â in which people will be lifted out of their environment and placed in another, very different one for a month in order to illuminate an issue. So a rich person might be on the street (homelessness), a law-abiding citizen put in prison (the criminal justice system). Spurlock will host and produce. It will be on FX, possibly by fall.
For now, heâs anxiously awaiting the release of âSuper Size Me.â
âI think the movie will change the way Americans eat forever,â says Isaacs.
Certainly Spurlock has modified his diet. He has four pounds left to lose.
John Clark can be contacted at [email protected].