Maintenance Phase - The Obesity Epidemic

Episode Date: August 17, 2021

Over the last 30 years, fatness has been defined as a risk factor for disease, then a disease in itself, then a global epidemic. What caused this rapid shift? Who’s gonna join our group of B-roll vi...gilantes? And did we just hear Morgan Freeman?Support us:Hear bonus episodes on PatreonDonate on PayPalGet Maintenance Phase T-shirts, stickers and moreBooks!Fat Politics Killer Fat The End of the Obesity Epidemic Folk Devils and Moral Panics Moral Panics Links!American Obesity Association PSAAMA Recognizes Obesity as a Disease Regarding Obesity as a Disease: Evolving Policies and Their Implications For Researchers on Obesity: Historical Review of Extra Body Weight Definitions Obesity task force linked to WHO takes “millions” from drug firms Medicare’s search for effective obesity treatments: diets are not the answer Research: How Americans’ Biases Are Changing (or not) Over Time Satcher: Obesity Reaching Crisis Levels Do Photographic Images of Obese Persons Influence Antifat Attitudes?Did the American Medical Association make the correct decision classifying obesity as a disease? What exactly is a disease? The “Childhood Obesity Epidemic”: Health Crisis or Social Construction? Fears of a fat planet overblown, skeptics say An Unjust War: The Case Against the Government’s War on Obesity Expanding Definitions of Obesity May Harm Children Support the show

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to maintenance phase, the podcast that would never film you from across the street showing only your body, but not your head. There's actually research on that specific thing. I know. And we're totally going to fucking talk about it. It's like you already know, Mike. It's like you already know. This is a thing. The only places in American life that you see that many headless torsos are local news segments
Starting point is 00:00:36 about obesity and grinder. As a gay man who researches this issue, I am very familiar with this format. Yeah. Go down the whole rabbit hole. Yeah. The rabbit hole also a section of scruff. Yes. I'm Aubrey Gordon.
Starting point is 00:00:50 I am Michael Hobbs. If you would like to support the show, you can do that through Patreon at patreon. Patreon.com slash maintenance phase. You can also buy t-shirts, mugs, masks, masks. They're coming back at Tea Public on our T-Public store. Both of those are linked for you in the show notes and at maintenance phase.com. And today, we're going to talk about the obesity epidemic. Yes.
Starting point is 00:01:11 Our morbidly awesome obesity trilogy. So how do you come to this topic? Like, what would you characterize your sort of like baseline analysis? This is a part of the story that I'm really interested in because we both grew up at this time when like there were just like constant cover stories in like time newsweek new york times atlantic like you name it they had a cover story about like the obesity epidemic there's like the kids in obesity there's like the military in obesity like it took on a different flavor every year but just clockwork but what's your relationship do you remember those stories you remember hearing that phrase when you were a kid yes i in sort of charting out
Starting point is 00:01:53 this history i was like oh this was when i was in high school and college yeah what a great fun to have people hyper-focused on how terrible fat people are. You're a fat high schooler. Don't feel bad enough. Get ready. Yeah. Here comes the Atlantic with some statistics to drop on you. So that's my like relationship to it is this sort of like wave of media stories that was paired
Starting point is 00:02:17 with a wave of people in my life who had spoken about my size before, but never in terms of health. Who maybe had said, that doesn't look good on you at that. size or maybe had said, think about how cute you'd be. Think about the clothes you could wear if you just lost some weight. And what happened during this time is that all shifted to, I just want you to be around and I want you to stay alive and you're going to die. That's interesting that immediately it became something that people used to attack you personally,
Starting point is 00:02:48 right? Because all of these stories, I feel like went out of their way to be like, well, you know, we can't necessarily use it for individuals. They have the sort of the standard caveats. Yeah. But of course, all of that disappears once people kind of absorb the information and regurgitate it back out. Like, of course, people are going to apply it to every fat person they know. So should we dive on in? Let's do it.
Starting point is 00:03:09 Take me on a journey. Excellent. So I wanted to start with context and what we know about rates of fatness, sort of what things are changing and how. And what researchers actually tell us about the nature of fatness and fat people. We're not going to go super deep into the, like, fat and fat. health correlation stuff, not because that's not important, but because we're going to do a full episode on just that. Extravaganza.
Starting point is 00:03:34 We have this collective sense that, like, obesity and overweight rates are on a, like, rocket ship to the moon and they're showing no signs of slowing. And the data shows us something significantly more moderate than that. Okay. Basically, obesity rates are increasing. And I will say, I'm going to use the terms overweight and obesity, not because I love them, but because they are the terms for the BMI categories. And all of this sort of obesity rate stuff is decided based on the BMI.
Starting point is 00:04:05 There's not another measure of overweight or obesity that folks are using here. It's just BMI categories. We need to talk about your fat phobia, Aubrey. Update your language. Here's what we know. One, we know that obesity rates are increasing. Some folks chart that back to the 70s. Some folks chart it back to the 40s.
Starting point is 00:04:27 But either way, there's been this sort of like pretty slow and steady climb of the rates at which people are becoming moving into the sort of quote unquote obese category of the BMI. The rates of overweight are not increasing. Oh. So it appears that people who are already in the overweight BMI category are moving into the obese category, but not necessarily that a bunch of thin people are suddenly becoming fat. Nobody knows why either of those things are happening. Fat people could be fat because of leptin, because of insulin insensitivity, because of the built environment, because of genetics or epigenetics. This is what they call multifactorial phenomenon, right?
Starting point is 00:05:10 And I also think in the same way we've had a million articles about like the obesity epidemic is out of control. We've also had a million articles of like, does this random thing explain the obesity epidemic? Gut bacteria has been a big thing the last couple years. there was a wave of like sleep things that like Americans aren't getting as much sleep and that's why obesity. And it's like those wacky explanations could be part of it. But it's never going to be one thing. Totally. In addition to body size being sort of influenced by all of these complex factors, so are the diseases and health conditions that we associate with fatness, right? Heart disease,
Starting point is 00:05:47 stroke, cancer, diabetes all have multiple sources, causes, triggers, contributing factors, all that kind of stuff, right? And the relationship between fatness and these health conditions is also complex and not super well understood scientifically, right? In addition to that, just like a couple more things as like sort of baseline things to get out. One, obesity is not a cause of death. There is not a death certificate that says, this person died of being fat. It is correlated to things that are causes of death, but just that in a sort of quote unquote epidemic that's fueled by this idea of obesity-related deaths, it bears repeating. That's not actually a thing that we can say for sure.
Starting point is 00:06:29 One of the things that I found in low this so much research, so much goddamn research for this episode. I'm tired of reading books. You love it. I need TV for a couple of days. And then I will be back to furiously reading like a book a day about like everything is alive. You need like a Netflix reality show, stab.
Starting point is 00:06:52 Okay, so the sort of turn that we're going to explore today is that all the way up until the mid-90s and then in a major way in late 90s, mostly people just saw fatness as a result of lifestyle choices. It wasn't framed as a medical problem until very recently, historically. Interesting. In 1999 and 2000 really seems to be where we get this term, the obesity epidemic. coming out in full force. I always like finding new ways in which the 1990s were trash. Oh, my God. That's part of the project today.
Starting point is 00:07:32 We're going to go 1990s. We're going to go 2000s. Hell yeah. It is going to be a tour through your high school, college, and early 20s. I hope we talk about Cameron Mannheim. So our story begins, Michael. It begins in 1997. There is this sort of small but growing group of researchers,
Starting point is 00:07:51 clinicians, public health people. who really thought that we were getting the conversation about fatness and fat people all wrong. And that frankly, it's just not getting enough attention. They just can't really get the time of day from the media in the way that they would like to be able to. And they really do see this as like a catastrophic kind of thing in some cases, right? The biggest champion of that, the biggest believer, is a pediatrician named William Deetz. Okay. In 1997, he becomes the director of the division for nutrition and physical activity at the CDC.
Starting point is 00:08:27 Here's a quote from a book called Fat Politics by Eric Oliver. Actually, I might send this to you. Are you up for reading a quote? Let's do it. It says, obesity, viewed by many as simply a consequence of lifestyle, was not seen as the disease transmitted across populations. Deats, however, held a view that was becoming more prevalent within medicine, that obesity was a condition influenced by the environment and a condition that people passively experienced, something that happened to them rather than simply the result of their own choices.
Starting point is 00:08:57 In other words, obesity was a disease. So this guy, Dr. Deeds, takes this on as sort of his pet project, right? We're also already getting the maintenance phase dramatic irony sugar high of someone who seems to be doing their best and someone who's like, oh, it's a disease. And if we reclassified as a disease, people will see it as like this complicated phenomenon influenced by the environment rather than a failure of personal ethics. And like, that's not what America learned about this phenomenon over the next 20 years. Mike, my next bullet point in my notes just says they're playing our song because they totally
Starting point is 00:09:38 fucking are. Like, good scientist means well. Yeah. It goes sideways. Yeah. So part of how this goes sideways is actually in how deep. communicates this set of ideas. He comes up with these heat maps, those maps that are like an outline of the U.S. and each state is sort of shaded into a different level. Right. And it's like number
Starting point is 00:10:00 of food poisonings or whatever. And then like some states are like dark purple and some states are green or whatever. Yeah. Totally. That's the way that he decides to convey to his colleagues, sort of the rising rates of fat people. And so it moves from white to pink to red first in a few states and then in more and more he's doing these sort of overtime. And it really physically sort of looks like the spread of a contagious disease. Yeah. I've seen those charts and yeah, it looks like one of those scenes in like outbreak or something. It's like, idiot Nashville. It's spreading. It's just rough, right? But also, it's the first time that someone has sort of put this in map or talking point or sort of like jazzy, concise terms. And so those maps catch on like,
Starting point is 00:10:46 wildfire. They catch on like a disease. They're suddenly everywhere, right? So academics start using them. Public health officials start using them. And within a few short years, that turns into folks sort of publicly referring to obesity as an epidemic. That's all happening in 1997 and 1998, by 2000, medical institutions start adopting new frameworks around defining overweight and obesity as diseases unto themselves. A few short years later in 2008, the obesity society is an organization whose tagline is professionals collaborating to overcome obesity. They pull together a panel of experts to consider this question of whether or not, obesity is a disease.
Starting point is 00:11:40 This is a quote directly from them. They couldn't come up with a real answer to this question, quote, because of a lack of a clear, specific, widely accepted, and scientifically applicable definition of disease. Yeah, this sounds like the never-ending debate between what's a dialect and what's a language. That is like much more a distinction about power dynamics than it is about linguistics. Yeah, totally. This is another one of those places where there is a group of people in a room messily making a messy decision.
Starting point is 00:12:13 Another element of this that's tricky is that I think people in science don't want to talk about outcomes because the purpose of reclassifying something as a disease is to achieve a particular outcome, right? It's to get political attention on it. It's to get public attention on it. All of that is fine. Yeah. But oftentimes scientists' refusal to acknowledge that their political actors, leads them to make very politically bad decisions. I think part of that is that it feels uncomfortable to go,
Starting point is 00:12:42 you know what, I actually have a dog in this race. You know what I mean? Like, okay. Yeah. And that's ultimately sort of where they land, right? They pick another couple of guideposts. One is that they look to their peers in sort of medical communities and they see some growing support for considering these sort of rates of fatness
Starting point is 00:13:01 to be a disease. And then they do your favorite thing. Michael Hobbs, they weigh the imagined benefits and the imagined harms. Yes. And they decide that the imagined benefits outweigh the harms. Always works. And decide it would be more beneficial. In each of these decision-making processes, the WHO, the obesity society, we'll get
Starting point is 00:13:24 to the American Medical Association in a minute. There is no consulting with, like, fat people. Yeah. I mean, I don't know if they would have been any better on other minority status. at the time, but fatness is a minority status that is considered to be temporary. Yep. Like no one says, like, right now he's Asian American, but later he might not be. So we don't need to consult him on this.
Starting point is 00:13:48 So I feel like people skip the like, let's talk to fat advocacy groups about this step in these kinds of processes because they're like, well, they don't want to be fat anyway. Yeah. And I already know how fat people feel about themselves. They hate it. They're disgusted by themselves. How could they feel any other way? And it's like, well, yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:06 So the WHO changes their definition of obesity as a disease in 2000. In 2008, the obesity society changes their definition and recommends defining this as a disease. And in 2013, the American Medical Association kicks in as well and goes, yeah, actually, it's a disease. Okay, so all the dominoes are clicking into place now. There is a great New York Times piece. It's just called AMA recognizes obesity. as a disease that encapsulates so much of this. So I'm going to send you two quotes, and I'm going to have you read both quotes.
Starting point is 00:14:42 Ooh, ooh, ooh. The American Medical Association has officially recognized obesity as a disease, a move that could induce physicians to pay more attention to the condition and spur more insurers to pay for treatments. In making the decision, delegates at the Association's annual meeting in Chicago overrode a recommendation against doing so by a committee that had studied the matter. Whoops. So they assigned a committee to study this, and the committee was like, don't do this.
Starting point is 00:15:10 And then they did it. They spent a year studying this. And they were like, it's a bad idea. And the AMA was like, no, it's not. And part of the reason I wanted to lift this up is, A, I think when we hear proclamations like this, it's easy to think, like, oh, that represents consensus. In this case, it does not represent consensus. It represents an institutional position, which,
Starting point is 00:15:33 differs from, like, there's a difference of opinion happening here, right? And also I wanted to lift it up because, holy shit, this is the exact thing that happened at the World Health Organization when they redefined sort of the levels of overweight and obesity and adopted the BMI as a thing, that there was all of this disagreement and they were going against their own recommendations. No one is ever going to build a statue to the people that are like, it's a little more complicated. We don't necessarily disagree, but we just want to slow down.
Starting point is 00:16:03 Is this your way of telling me that you and I are never going to be statues in a park? 1,000% true. Let's just all take a minute. Like that person does not get biographies written about them. Yeah. So I was going to send you quote number two. But I'll tell you this. Like basically in this news story, they then go on to talk about how the committee voted
Starting point is 00:16:25 against calling obesity a disease because it's based in the BMI. and the BMI is oversimplistic and deeply flawed. Wow. So they straight up are just like, this is a bad idea because the BMI is a bad idea. And until we get some other kind of grounding in this issue that's not rooted in this really terrible tool, then we're not in a place to make this proclamation.
Starting point is 00:16:52 That's actually interesting because it's not even like a woke objection or whatever. Like this is going to hurt people's feelings. No. It's like, this is just bad science. Like, even if you think that body fat induces all these problems, you still wouldn't be using the BMI for the, like, the rock problem that we talked about last episode. No question. And both because of sort of the rock or Tom Cruise or like take your pick, right? But also because at this point in 2013, the science is even more thin than it is now on what the correlations actually are to these other sort of health conditions and diseases, right?
Starting point is 00:17:29 Because there's already studies starting to come out that show that it's not perfectly correlated with negative health outcomes. Like, this debate is already going on of like what are the health effect of obesity. Yes. And when you sort of look back at a bunch of the data, it seems to show that those correlations really kick in. Some folks say at a BMI of 35 and some folks say at a BMI of 40. So we're talking about a very small portion of the population. I'm in that portion of the population. Other fat people are in that portion of the population.
Starting point is 00:18:02 But at this point, it's not like an overwhelming majority of Americans, right, who are in the high health risk category. Right. And even in that high health risk category, we don't totally know what's going on. Right. It is interesting to me, I will say, that you mentioned, like, it's not even a woke reason,
Starting point is 00:18:17 because that's what the AMA gives as their reasoning for overruling the committee. What? The AMA gives a few sort of strains, of reasoning. One, they say that it would help the public and elected officials take the quote unquote obesity epidemic more seriously. I would argue it sure did that. Good God.
Starting point is 00:18:38 Two is that it could help increase insurance coverage for treatments. Yeah. God. But again, none of those treatments make a majority of fat people thin in the long term. So like, sure, man, cover treatments, I guess. But like, shouldn't those treatments also be shown. to work for more than five to 10 pounds of weight loss. Also, just all of the ways the U.S.'s completely broken healthcare system warps all these
Starting point is 00:19:07 other elements of our lives. Yes. Because our health care system is so unjust that your insurance company can just, like, not cover you for stuff for no fucking reason. The entire medical industry has to be like, okay, how do we like trick the insurers into paying for this? Well, and also, like, what if instead of spending a fucking. year as a study group being like, what is this a disease or is this not a disease? What if instead of
Starting point is 00:19:32 doing that, they put that energy into addressing weight stigma or maybe just fixing the whole healthcare system and advocating for, you know what I'm saying? Like, yeah, there are things that we know would and could help that are way less murky than this, right? But this is the problem is that that requires them to act politically. Yeah. This thing of like, we're doctors, we are outside of the political system. It's like what prevents public health issues from being solved? You can't deal with an issue like this without playing in politics. You can't really deal probably with any health issue without playing in politics. Yeah. Politics is how you solve a lot of these issues. Absolutely. And also, can I add another, we're going to get a little echo of our BMI story here. Do it. One of the
Starting point is 00:20:21 next things that they say in this news story from the New York Times is, oh, by the way, while we're trying to get these treatments for obesity covered, there are two new weight loss drugs on the market. Of course. And they're actually not selling as well as we might have thought. Nice. They just, they straight up put that in this article.
Starting point is 00:20:40 It's like, we're going to get all this insurance coverage. Also, these weight loss drugs have been underperforming. They don't say, hopefully this helps, but it really feels like that's the missing sentence here. Do you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:20:51 Like, God, speaking of structural incentives, man, the doctors want to get out the pencil. Well, and the like the manufacturers of those drugs want them to sell better, right? I mean, the third reason is they say, we think it's going to help produce stigma facing fat people. This is the William Dietz approach, right? Which is like, if we can call this a disease, then people will understand that it's really complicated, that it requires lifelong management. And people don't actually understand that.
Starting point is 00:21:19 I mean, like, again, this is a place where I'm like, it would have been so helpful to talk to some fat people. Yeah. And that doesn't appear. to have happened. It is interesting because it sounds like they really were on some level doing this in good faith, thinking that the term disease takes agency away from the individual. But once you start to associate a person with a disease, you're going to stigmatize the individual.
Starting point is 00:21:42 Yeah. And I mean, I think this is borne out in the public response to this AMA decision, right? There's some folks who express some relief and agreement. Those are mostly people who are clinicians or obesity researchers. There is some nervousness from predominantly. fat people that this is going to increase stigma. Facts. And then there is a pretty broad base of public response that is disapproving of this decision
Starting point is 00:22:08 and that, you know, it will downplay personal responsibility. Oh, then there's like, the anti-woke people who are like, you're going too easy on the fat people. Critical race theory. Those are the real heroes in all these debates. I don't want my kid in kindergarten to know that it might be okay to be nice to a fat person. Boom. I always love whenever you have these debates, there's always someone pops out of a fucking trash can to be like,
Starting point is 00:22:32 we're already too nice to the stigmatized group. We're already pretty mean. I mean, I think so like even when you have a shared framework for conversations like these, we still kind of fill in the blanks with our own biases, right? Oh, yeah. To my mind, when this news came out, I was like, oh, we're fucked. Like, I absolutely remember when the AMA thing came out. And I was like,
Starting point is 00:22:56 it, this feels really bad and it feels like people are going to be more of a dick to me. And that's absolutely what happened. Yeah. We're talking about eight years ago, right? Yeah. So, like, think about the amount of sort of, like the volume of news stories, the volume of research that's happened at that time. It's significant, right? Cameron Mannheim's book had already come on. Wake up. I'm fat. Yeah, which I read in like eighth grade. Yeah. Did you really? Yeah. Oh, my God. This is like a huge precursor to me being gay, of course. I'm like, I'm obsessed with a fat lady who's on TV. A fat lady who seems kind of gay. I know. I know. So I was also really into Rosie O'Donnell. And then I told my parents I was gay and they're like, we had no idea. I'm like, guys. You just kept asking for like coosh slingshots to fire into an imaginary audience. You were like, I'm a Rosie O'Donnell Stan. Here we go. So there are some organizations, some anti-obesity organizations that feel like this is, again, sort of shortchanging the conversation. The biggest one of those anti-obesity organizations is the American Open.
Starting point is 00:23:55 obesity association. Okay. They're founded in 1995. They describe their work as centering around treatment and prevention of obesity and reducing stigma, all three of those things. Okay. But then they say, we want to reduce stigma for, quote, Americans suffering with the disease of obesity.
Starting point is 00:24:14 Yeah, I mean. Do you want to reduce stigma? It's also not clear to me that you can, like, reduce stigma about a group that you're trying to erase on some level. Like, you should lose weight. but also people shouldn't be mean to you. That's a tough little tightrope to walk. It feels a little bit like the solution to people bullying gay kids is for gay kids to act less gay and maybe just be straight, right?
Starting point is 00:24:36 Where you're like, well, no. Straighten those wrists. Yeah. Butch it up. The American Obesity Association claims credit for a lot of policy changes. They claim credit for influencing the Office of the Surgeon General on this issue. Okay. They are major drivers of this idea of obesity as a disease.
Starting point is 00:24:59 So we've got this director at the CDC, Dr. Dietz, and then we've got the American Obesity Association, both really tackling this hard, right? And going hard on this is a disease. One of the biggest sources for this episode, there are three books that I read that were all fantastic. One of them is a book called Fat Politics by a sociologist from the University of Chicago named Eric Oliver. He did a bunch of research into the American Obesity Association, and he found that the organization was nearly fully funded by weight loss companies. No way. So they are funded by Weight Watchers.
Starting point is 00:25:39 They're funded by Jenny Craig. They're funded by Slim Fast. They're funded by weight loss surgeons. And Mike, would you like to guess who the final funder is? Is it our old pals at Roche? Yes, it fucking is. Yeah. I was just kidding.
Starting point is 00:25:53 You're, you're like slowly putting a tinfoil hat on me. I'm like kneeling in front of you. And like, here, Mike, take this. Because like, the reducing stigma thing, like, it's, it's not the cake, right? It's not even maybe the frosting. No. It's not a core part of the mission. The core part of the mission is getting fat people to want to lose weight.
Starting point is 00:26:18 Yep. So I did a little YouTube search in to see if we could get some of the leaders of the, American Obesity Association and like hear their actual voices. And I think I found something better. Oh, no. Are they all like CrossFit instructors? No. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:26:33 I would love it if it was just like all the Peloton dudes. Okay. So I'm going to send you a link. They did, this was last year. They did a series of PSAs. The video I'm about to send you has 28 views. So I don't know who these PSAs are for. I, as someone who used to work at NGOs and has, like, made videos for NGOs, I love me an NGO
Starting point is 00:27:00 YouTube video with, like, 16 views that they probably paid like $80,000 for. Well, just you fucking wait, Henry Higgins. I think your mind might be blown by how much money they did or didn't pay for this PSA. I've got it all queued up. You let me know when you're ready to hit play. Okay. Over the past 50 years, there have been over five, five, thousand recommendations and initiatives from the most brilliant minds in America to prevent obesity.
Starting point is 00:27:31 All of them have failed. Oh my God. We have bold, new ideas to be active, to be healthy, and to live longer. I hope you will join us at the American Obesity Association.org. Rethink. Renew I love that they couldn't afford Morgan Freeman So they got someone who sounds exactly like Morgan Freeman
Starting point is 00:27:59 Wait, do we not think that that's Morgan Freeman? That cannot be Morgan Freeman With 29 views, this is not Morgan Freeman. If there's one thing I know about Morgan Freeman, it's that he is box office catnip There is then clip art of an American flag waver That was one of the ugliest fucking things I've ever seen. This bugs me so much
Starting point is 00:28:19 when people use after effects for evil. It was like clip art of like a CGI waving American flag and then just like a box of text in front of it. Well, and also the box of text is, again, Michael Hobbs catnip, which is just like, the most brilliant people have come up with all these ideas to counter obesity and all of them have failed, but not us.
Starting point is 00:28:42 We're like, well. I know. How long have you been working on this issue again? Who failed? Totally. Who's doing the failing? I mean, like, not, I don't have anything against this organization in particular or this PSA or whatever, but the rhetoric doesn't hold. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:58 It's the same fucking rhetoric as like diet sales, right? Where they're like, you've tried everything. Now try this thing. That's the same as all the other things you've already tried, right? Like, yeah. Our thing might not fail. We should also mention no country or American state has ever reduced its obesity rate. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:16 And like no one has proposed like a radical rethink of what we're doing. Right. It is wild. It's like, no, no, no, no, let's continue doing exactly the same things like the billboards, five fruits and vegetables. Let's do it all, just more of it. And you're like, well, it's been 40 years. And it's not even like it's stalled.
Starting point is 00:29:34 It's like it's continuing to get worse according to your definition of what bad is. Totally. And at the time sort of in the 90s and 2000s, these folks from the American Obesity Association are not only doing the like, We've got bold new ideas thing, which is like, do you? Yeah. They're also making wild ass fucking claims that are not substantiated by any data. Like their president will make these speeches and will say things like, quote,
Starting point is 00:30:05 medicine has never seen an epidemic of this proportion. I mean, smallpox. I don't know. They're also saying making these sort of broad claims that get repeated a lot, particularly by like elected officials saying that because of obesity, children will have a shorter lifespan than their parents. Don't get me started. Demonstrably false is all I will say. Don't wind up my little back and get me talking about that fucking number, which shows up
Starting point is 00:30:29 in like every goddamn magazine article has ever been written about this issue. I'm winding up your back. Tell me what you think. Well, it's just like, how would you even possibly determine this? How would you possibly know that a five-year-old today is going to have worse outcomes than like a 55-year-old today? We're literally talking about something that's going to happen like 70 years in the future. It just is like on its face a completely absurd thing to say.
Starting point is 00:30:53 And at this point in the 90s, life expectancies are pretty steadily continuing to climb. And there's not really a way to isolate like these are the people who are going to become fat. Here's what that's going to mean for their life expectancy. Exactly. All of that is a little guesstimating. And again, filling in the gaps with what you believe about fatness and fat people. Exactly. The whole thing is like an exercise in math. Would you like to hear another on its face completely absurd thing to say that they're saying around this time?
Starting point is 00:31:21 Ooh, give it to me. Their president in 1999 says, his name's Richard Atkinson, says, quote, obesity is the most prevalent, fatal, chronic relapsing disorder of the 21st century. He says this, before the 21st century has begun. That's the only thing to debunk there. Yeah, of course. It's totally fatal. People die being fat all the time. This is an organization to recap that is fighting fat stigma. Yeah, totally. Prevalent, fatal, chronic relapsing.
Starting point is 00:31:52 Though the fat people you see are walking diseases. They're ticking time bombs of disease and death. Jesus Christ. He says this, right? He says this thing about prevalent fatal chronic relapsing disorder of the 21st century before the 21st century. And what starts to happen is elected officials and appointed officials start to pick that up. Yeah. David Satcher.
Starting point is 00:32:14 who is the Surgeon General under Bill Clinton releases a report in 2001 saying that quote unquote obesity is reaching epidemic proportions. He cites that schools are a key place to fight against the quote unquote obesity epidemic. Again, fucking citation needed, my guy. I mean, also, until you come to me
Starting point is 00:32:34 with a big fat check for school lunches, shut the hell up about what we're going to do in the schools to fight obesity. Well, also, like one of the things, this is not part of my notes or whatever. But like one of the things that they look at is vending machines in schools in one of the books that I read. And they were like, hey man, if you want to get vending machines out of schools, if you want to get fast food out of schools, the reason that school districts are signing those contracts is because they are fucking underfunded.
Starting point is 00:33:02 Dude, I know. My district got 10 million bucks from Pepsi the year that I was entering high school. Yes. I also, I love that obesity is like this scourge and it's like destroying society and everybody's going to die. But it's not a big enough problem for us. to like spend nominally more money on like feeding children. Like, no, no, it's not that big of a crisis, you guys. And then the next surgeon general is this guy named Richard Carmona, who goes fully like,
Starting point is 00:33:27 hold my beer. Like, let me escalate this. How can I escalate this? In the years after September 11th, Richard Carmona is the surgeon general. He's asked by a reporter what the greatest threat to Americans health is. The way that he tells the story, he's like, this reporter really expected me to say, terrorism. But I said there are two. Terrorism is the threat from without and obesity, which is the threat from within. So you still said terrorism. That's the threat to our health, Mike. I don't know what
Starting point is 00:33:57 you're talking about. By 2004, he sort of refined this and he says, quote, as we look to the future and where childhood obesity will be in 20 years, it is every bit as threatening to us as the terrorist threat we face today. That's actually true because the terrorist threat was not that big of a threat And like that entire era is extremely embarrassing now. You're right about both in that you're wrong about both. You were correct with that one, Dr. Carmona. Yeah. So now we're not only in an epidemic.
Starting point is 00:34:23 We're also in a war. Oh, yeah. The war on childhood obesity. Very chill to make this rhetorical device of fucking child soldiers who are fat kids who have had it too good for too long. Famously. This is also where we get into some good classic moral panic stuff about needing to think of the children. I feel like kids get invoked in the debate over obesity a lot in a way that's very weird because children's eating decisions are the result of their parents and their schools.
Starting point is 00:34:55 So like even if we are talking about childhood obesity, we are still talking about adults. Yeah. But it's just again, like we've talked about this before, projecting all of these adult anxieties onto kids and making kids sort of the canary in the coal mine about. these very adult worries, right? Yeah. This also comes on the heels of no child left behind, which institutes this test-based funding approach to schools where you're like, oh, it's bullshit all around.
Starting point is 00:35:24 Yeah, and also resulted in a lot of cuts to physical education because you can't standardize that the way that you can, multiple choice questions. Right. This is also around the time Michelle Obama calls obesity, quote, one of the greatest threats to America's health and economy, which is real wild framing. But it's also not true because we charge. people so much for health care that it's actually really good for our economy that we all get really sick. Boom. Dunked on Michelle Obama first time. So some scholars have sort of charted the
Starting point is 00:35:52 overall changes in media coverage around this issue. In 1994, there were 33 national news stories about obesity. Okay. In 2000, there were 107. Nice. And by 2004, there were 700 national news stories about obesity. That sounds about right. That you remember this. This This was what faced us when we opened the newspaper at the kitchen table every morning. Not only were there news stories about it. Like, that's one thing, but the news stories were fucking garbage. They were like super alarmist. They were not really based in super strong science.
Starting point is 00:36:27 They would sort of pull one statistic out of context and then just be like, everybody freak out. You're going to get fat and then you're going to die, right? Yeah. So one of these, this is a quote on a headline from the Associated Press from Eric Oliver, who wrote Fat Politics. Quote, on January 8, 2003, the Associated Press ran a story with the headline, quote, obesity at age 20 can cut lifespan by 13 to 20 years.
Starting point is 00:36:54 Oh. Only later did the story reveal that the obesity in question was at a BMI of 45. That would be 340 pounds for a six foot man, which affected less than 1% of the population. Right. So, like, we're getting these big, splashy headlines at a time when a bunch of people have been newly recategorized as obese who weren't before going, okay, now you're fat. And because you're fat, you're going to live 20 years less.
Starting point is 00:37:22 It's just an invitation to be mean to people. Yes. You're obviously going to die like drastically sooner. So like I have to tell you this. Yes. And in terms of shaping people's perceptions of fat people, the images paired with a news story matter more than the text of the news story. The images, dude.
Starting point is 00:37:41 The fucking. images are brutal. Yeah. So Yale University hosted some research on images used in news media. This was headed up by Rebecca Poole, who's done a bunch of research around weight stigma and anti-fat bias. In this study, they showed people a neutral news story about obesity and accompanied those neutral news stories with a mix of images of fat people that either leaned into stereotypes or leaned out of stereotypes, right? Right. A well-dressed fat person and a poorly dressed fat person. A fat person exercising or a fat person eating junk food, right? They found two things that I found really interesting.
Starting point is 00:38:21 One was that they found that those who viewed the quote unquote negative or stereotypical images of fat people did report higher levels of anti-fat bias. Yeah. So this is around the time when truly every night on the news, there are these deeply fearmongering stories about obesity. And then there are these shots of fat people filmed from the next. down. So just headless, faceless, fat waistlines sort of milling around. Awful. I would argue that those are stereotypical and unflattering. Often they are fat people like sitting down and eating a sandwich from Subway or eating something from McDonald's.
Starting point is 00:38:58 That's the thing. It's not just like it's fat people going about their day. It's always them like doing something that like makes them look slovenly. They're like a cigarette in one hand, a burger and the other. It's like they're clearly looking for images that are like this person is going to die in the next like 10 minutes. Yes. And they'll also do ill-fitting clothing. It's so bad. Really and truly, if you turned on the news on any given channel, there was a very good chance that you would see that footage at least once, right? Fat people are never happy. Fat people are never successful. Fat people are never just like doing normal stuff and not thinking about their weight. It's just like that is central to who they are and like they look like shit at all times. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:37 And I will say during that time, so you're asking me like, what was this time like for you? personally earlier on, I will say during that time, I spent a good 10 to 15 years watching that B-roll and I would often tear up watching it because, oh, I might tear up now, because I was looking for myself. You know, like this stuff is filmed in public. It's filmed without the consent and often without the knowledge of the people in it. and absolutely every time I would look for, okay, does somebody have their nails done like mine?
Starting point is 00:40:15 Is that my jacket? Are those my pants? So I think there's like both the dehumanizing effect of the attitudes that it very clearly, and again here empirically stokes in people who aren't fat. And there's the psychic toll that it takes on actual fat people to be like, not only is this an existential threat to me,
Starting point is 00:40:40 there is a material moment where I'm like, they might be using an image of my body that I don't know that someone else to prove this point and to make people hate people who look like me even more. I cannot watch that footage without thinking of somebody like coming home from work and like turning on the TV to watch the news and seeing themselves. Yes. And I will also say like I have talked to so many other fat people who have the same experience. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:07 Where they're like, I either can't watch it at all. or when I do, I have to watch it so fucking carefully. I have to watch it forensically for any signs that this might be me. And that is a horrible fucking way to walk around in your life. What is the opposite of a Pulitzer? What can we do in those organizations that still do this like? A Pulitzer. My single worst joke I've ever made.
Starting point is 00:41:34 I would call it a dad joke, but that is disrespectful to dads and their jokes. I just think that like there should be some sort of gang of fat people that put on masks and drive around a van and find the people that take that footage and just like smash their camera on the ground. Just be like, you piece of shit. Just vigilantes. I fucking saw you with a tripod.
Starting point is 00:41:56 I love this idea. So can I tell you about their other finding? Yeah, yeah. Related to anti-fat bias in this particular study around news media coverage. So this is not a global or representative study. Lots and lots of astirons. risks here. This is a relatively small study. It was designed to find out something else. But in the process, they sort of went through the results on the quote unquote fat phobia scale.
Starting point is 00:42:20 They found that anti-fat bias in this sample wasn't correlated to income. It wasn't correlated to age. It wasn't correlated to race or ethnicity. Gender. What it was correlated to was body size. The thinner you were, the more likely you were to express bias against fat people. It feels important to say because I think many, many people who are not, don't have the social experience of being perceived as fat or the institutional experience of being perceived as fat, right? Tend to think, why don't mean fat people harm, right? Like, I'm not going around yelling at fat people like, hey, fatty, put down the burger.
Starting point is 00:42:57 That's not actually how anti-fatness appears in many fat people's lives, right? It appears much more often in family members being like, hey, do you want to work buddy, I'd be happy to pay for your Weight Watchers membership. How can I help? Right? Like those things are also markers that someone is monitoring your body, that the size and shape of your body is wrong, that you are being judged and that you need to take corrective action to get back in that person's good graces.
Starting point is 00:43:25 One of the biggest sort of things that often stands out on the fat phobia scale and is correlated to a bunch of other negative beliefs about fat people is simply the belief that fat people can control their body weight. If people believe that, they believe a bunch of other really horrific things about fat people. There's also, I mean, in the same way that scientists don't want to admit what impact they want to have on the world, I think journalists are totally disincentivized to actually look into the way that their work is affecting public perceptions and the experiences of actual groups in society. Yeah. Like one of the things, one of the actual categories, when you apply, when you send in one of your magazine articles to win a
Starting point is 00:44:06 Pulitzer is impact. Yeah. Like we expose this like evil used car salesmen and then they passed a law saying that used car dealerships can't do this. Me. Like we are told to highlight this that we want to have impacts in the world. But like journalists are not trained to actually take seriously. They're inadvertent impacts. Yes. And I think most of the impact of journalism is not deliberate. It's just like myths that we reinforce. It's images that we use. It's like bad headlines with like all of the caveats taken away, journalists affect public perceptions in ways that, like, they actually need to take seriously. And, like, yeah, if you've taken this B-roll, you should feel bad. I'm sorry. I'm not going to send Aubrey in a van to your house, but, like, you should feel
Starting point is 00:44:51 bad. No, I think the concern that people should have is Mike in a van to your house. I feel like you would get away. I would just be, like, real sad and be like, why would you do this? And I'd be like, you might actually, like, bring a baseball bat. Like. And I'd be on a bike, too, so I can't get away that fast. the problem. So the interesting, so like to this point on like what's the impact of this sort of media coverage, as it stands today, according to Harvard, 80% of Americans express some level of anti-fat bias. Oh, that's bad. They have pretty precise data on the increase in anti-fat bias around this time of the sort of peak of the obesity epidemic. They found that between 2004 and
Starting point is 00:45:35 2010, anti-fat bias, while many other forms of bias were declining, anti-fat bias rose 40%. I mean, sometimes we can be a little bit salty to people who are like really invested in this narrative, but also people, this is what people have been told for decades. Totally agree that you can like see where it comes from. Yeah. They're not like opting in to being terrible to fat people. They are being fed a narrative that is essentially like, you have to be mean to fat people for their health because.
Starting point is 00:46:05 because they don't know that they're fat and they don't know that they're going to die and you got to be the one to tell them, right? Yeah. Which is a very direct seeding of practices of bias, right? Yes. It's not necessarily their fault that this is sort of the framework that they're using, but they're still acting on that framework in ways that are really awful. Yes. My approach to those people is to be very polite and patient in real life and then very spicy on my podcast and on the Internet. I will go on a journey with you.
Starting point is 00:46:37 I will calmly walk you through the fact. Like, if we are friends and we are talking, like, I will be patient. I will listen. And if you're some random person on Twitter, I'm going to shout at you. I'm sorry. Absolutely. I'm not going to be patient that way. So, like, we've got these sort of fallout in media.
Starting point is 00:46:55 We've got this sort of shift in funding for research and an academic discourse around a quote-unquote obesity epidemic. And we also have some fallout in policy interventions, right? We start changing school lunches. We start requiring in some states a certain number of PE hours in order to graduate from high school. We start sending out BMI report cards to parents of school age kids saying, here's your kids BMI. We start adding calorie labels to restaurant menus because obesity rates are by design,
Starting point is 00:47:27 higher in communities of color. We start sort of funding community-specific projects to prompt weight loss, particularly in black communities, there's like significant investment. We can debate whether or not each of those are worthy policies on their own. The fact remains that not one of these are proven strategies to prompt weight loss. It's also frustrating because there are proven interventions that improve people's diets and exercise, like relatively reliably. But because we have this narrow focus on weight as like the only metric that matters,
Starting point is 00:48:03 Like, we're not moving the metrics that we actually can move. Like, we're trying to do the hard thing and leapfrogging the easier things. Yeah, I mean, around this same time, speaking of sort of the easier things, in 2006, the Alliance for a Healthyer Generation, which is a collaboration between the Clinton Foundation and the American Heart Association, make this big announcement. They're joined by representatives from Coca-Cola, from PepsiCo, from Schwepps, and from the American. American Beverage Association to announce that they're going to start removing soda from schools. Bill Clinton and Mike Huckabee both point to this as sort of a sign of this extraordinary investment from the business community and public health that they're willing to forego their own profits and their own customers.
Starting point is 00:48:48 What is not mentioned in that press around this is that these beverage manufacturers are facing a massive lawsuit from the Center for Science and the Public Interest. And as part of this agreement to pull soda from schools, that lawsuit is dropped. Oh, yeah. Around the same time McDonald's is facing a class action lawsuit from fat plaintiffs. The argument of that lawsuit is McDonald's has been making addictive and fattening food, blah, blah, blah. So in 2005, there was a bill introduced in Congress called the Personal Responsibility in Food Consumption Act. Wait, did that stand for prick?
Starting point is 00:49:28 What is this thing for? The Polish responsibility, Prifk. No, it would be Prifka. Oh, Prifka. Which is not as good. Do better, Congress. So it was referred to in the media as, I shit you not, the cheeseburger bill. Nice.
Starting point is 00:49:44 And it was specifically designed to prevent consumers from suing fast food restaurants. I mean, that does honestly seem like kind of a frivolous lawsuit, to be totally honest. But also, we're now losing our rights to sue companies. Like that's not a good outcome. Right. I'm not like on board with either of these lawsuits necessarily. Both of them seem kind of stigmatizing to me and weird. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:50:08 But it does feel telling to me that at the same time that it looks like we're doing these great altruistic things, what most of them amount to is protecting corporations from some sense of accountability for their contributions here, right? It's also worth noting that the cheeseburger bill was introduced by a Florida congressman named Rick Kelle. who had received the maximum legally allowable campaign contribution from McDonald's. Yeah, I can feel the tinfoil hat crinkling around my head right now. Just like metal in my ears.
Starting point is 00:50:42 So the last thing I wanted to talk about here, and this is something that you and I have talked about a little bit, is around the sort of like social science and theory of moral panics. There is an argument to be made here. It has been made many times by many scholars and many researchers, right? Right. This is something that has not really made it into the mainstream. While there are observable trends that people may be getting fatter over time, I would argue, and many of these scholars would argue that our response to that observable thing meets a lot of the criteria for a moral panic. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:16 Yeah. So there's this sociologist named Stanley Cohen who writes a book called Folk Devils and Moral Panics. Oh, yeah. I've heard that. That's great. It's so good. It's so good. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:24 He lays out these sort of sequential phases of a moral panic. And then in 1994, Eric Good and Nachman Ben Yehuda establish five characteristics of a moral panic. So one, concern where there is a heightened level of concern about certain groups or categories. Two, hostility, where one can observe an increase in hostility toward the quote unquote deviance of quote unquote respectful society. Three, consensus, where a consensus about the reality. and seriousness of a threat can be found. Four, disproportionality, where public concern is in excess of what, quote, unquote, should be. And five, volatility, where the panic is temporary and fleeting, and though it might reoccur,
Starting point is 00:52:14 the panic is not long-lasting. To my mind, I think our sort of response to the obesity epidemic checks a number of those boxes, but not quite all of them. Yeah, I think it's been going on too long for it to have the volatility aspect. Although even within moral panics, there's like a typology about how long-lasting they are and the kinds of reactions that they inspire. Because another interesting thing about the obesity epidemic, I don't know that the response has been disproportionate because the response, the actual legislative response to it,
Starting point is 00:52:45 has mostly been like dumb bullshit nudge things, like these calorie markers. And like, to me, it gives a lie to the entire thing. Because if we actually took this seriously, we would have done something. But, like, we haven't actually done anything meaningful on this issue. We've just panicked about it. Yeah. And I think part of that disproportionality one to my mind is, like, what's the set of questions that you ask next?
Starting point is 00:53:08 And we really seem to have skipped over a whole lot of those clarifying questions, right? Like, what is the precise relationship between weight and these specific health markers? Yeah. Who does the obesity epidemic, quote unquote, affect? There's quite a bit of data that shows that it's predominantly a problem amongst men. but a bunch of our solutions, policy solutions, are aimed at women. There are sort of all of these things that if we were curious about the nature of this thing, we would ask a bunch more questions.
Starting point is 00:53:37 But we're not curious about it. We're just like, kill it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's also, I mean, in my own personal definition of moral panics, something that I see very clearly in the obesity stuff, the evidence just like isn't there. And the evidence isn't there in like this extremely obvious way. So it's like we're constantly debating the health effects. Like does it affect cancer?
Starting point is 00:53:58 Does it not affect cancer? Does it like obesity and health are just as two concepts so closely linked. But it's all irrelevant because the data is more consistent on the fact that people cannot lose weight and keep it off than it is about that being bad for them. Right. Even at the individual level, we cannot solve this problem. Yeah. And then it's like it's possible to write, you know, an entire 2,000, 5,000 word magazine article on like the obese. obesity epidemic and all these new solutions when it's like, people can't lose weight.
Starting point is 00:54:27 Yeah. Why are we talking about this? Like, everything else is secondary to that. So, like, we should just learn to live with the big people that we have. Right. Like, that's it. And I think there's even a conversation to have about, like, even if we have effective strategies for weight loss, how do we deploy those strategies and who are they aimed at and
Starting point is 00:54:45 all that kind of stuff, right? Like, unless and until we have those strategies, every fucking thing we do around this is punitive. Yeah. All of this stuff is designed around reminding fat people that were fat, reminding fat people that being fat is bad for you, and just making us sort of wear this kind of hair shirt in the absence of any real solutions, right? I mean, there's also, I think one way to look at moral panics is it's like these real
Starting point is 00:55:12 fears that get projected onto a minority group. The obesity epidemic has been a very effective moral panic in that it has distracted us from, you know, heart disease is the number one killer of Americans. Things like diabetes is like a pretty debilitating condition and like it causes a lot of pain and hurt in people's families. And like, I think that the institution of public health should be trying to solve these problems. Yeah. But instead of actually focusing on what were the real problems staring us in the face, it's like we pushed all of this onto fat people. Yeah. We should have just been having like not a moral panic, but like a regular normal level of concern for like these diseases that are like
Starting point is 00:55:52 like really difficult to have. Not a moral panic, but a regular panic is really what I thought you're about to say. A decent panic. Yeah. I mean, and also like, listen, if we're concerned with sort of the impacts of living with diabetes and we want to alleviate those impacts, then we could very well do something that is hard, but not complex, which is cover insulin for everyone who needs it. Dude, insulin, there should be like fire hydrants of insulin on every corner. Yes. Michael Hobbs, 2020. That's like such a perfect example, though, where it's like, we're so concerned about diabetes
Starting point is 00:56:30 that like every single fat person needs to get a goddamn lecture at the grocery store. But like, we're not concerned about it enough to like fuck with the patents? Right. Like, do we care about this issue or do we not care about this issue? Because it kind of seems like we don't actually care about this. Right. If we care about diabetes, we need to take on diabetes. If we care about heart disease, we need to take on heart disease.
Starting point is 00:56:49 But right now what we're taking on is a thing that is so. sort of a proxy risk factor. Yeah. And we're taking it on in part because we're all, we've already decided what we think about fat people and how they came to be fat, regardless of the data. And I got to say, it's extremely shitty to live in a world where people's sort of imagination of the healthiest and best world possible doesn't have people who look like me in it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:14 I mean, I think fat people have always been collateral damage in this entire debate, right? Like, I can't see any of the public health campaign. campaigns that we've had, like, anyone even thinking, like, whether they consulted fat people or not, even thinking about, like, what would it be like as a fat person to encounter this? Yeah. Yes. Even just imagining. Yes.
Starting point is 00:57:33 Like, very basic questions are not being asked. Listen, man, I feel like that sort of is the story of this sort of genesis of the obesity epidemic, right? This is not the kind of smoking gun story that we got with the BMI. it's much more a story about these very human flaws, like filling in the gaps of what we think we know with quote unquote common sense that just ends up drawing on our own existing ideas about who fat people are and how fat bodies work.
Starting point is 00:58:06 We tell ourselves sort of stories that strike familiar chords and that comfort us about the world and our role in it. Those stories are very comforting to thin people to be like, fat people are unhealthy. And as long as I'm not fat, I don't have to worry about it. health, which is also not true, right?
Starting point is 00:58:22 It feels like a real story of like a kernel of science and then a whole bunch of social narratives that grow up around that kernel of science, right? Yes. And as we know from history, the only way to solve issues like this is for four to six fat people to get in a van and find a local cameraman in your area who took B-roll that day and smash his camera to the ground and set it on fire. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.

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