The Bossticks - Vani Hari aka The Food Babe - Investigating Food Labeling, How To Decipher Ingredients, Activism, & The Food Industry
Episode Date: January 25, 2019#165: Vani Hari aka The Food Babe is an American author and activist who criticizes the food industry. On this episode we sit down with The Food Babe to discuss food labeling, how to decipher ingredie...nts, what to look for and watch out for in ingredients, & controversy in the food industry. To connect with Vani Hari click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by Skillshare. Skillshare is an online learning space offering more than 20,000 courses. Join the millions of students already learning on Skillshare today with a special offer just for our listeners: Get two months of Skillshare for just 99 cents. That's right, Skillshare is offering The Skinny Confidential listeners two months of unlimited access to over 20,000 classes for just 99 cents. To sign up, go to www.skillshare.com/skinny. This episode is brought to you by FOUR SIGMATIC We have been drinking this company's mushroom-infused elixirs and coffees for over a year now. When we need a break from coffee but still need that extra morning jolt and focus the Mushroom Coffee with Lion's Mane and Chaga is the way to go. Lauryn also drinks the Mushroom Matcha which is a green tea designed as a coffee alternative for those of you who want to cut back on caffeine without losing focus and cognitive boosts. This stuff doesn't actually taste like mushrooms, it's delicious. All of these blends have a ton of nutrients and amino acids to give you balanced energy without the jitters. To try FOUR SIGMATIC products go to foursigmatic.com/skinny and use promo code SKINNY for 15% off all products.
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She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie.
And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her.
The way we've been taught about food is that we're not really taught about what's really actually in it.
You know, when we take a class at school about nutrition, we're not taught about ingredients in processed foods, but that's the majority of our diets as Americans.
You know, we're not taught about what these chemicals are doing.
I mean, the fact that the majority of chemicals, 99% of them that have been invented over the last 50 years,
has been invented for one sole purpose and one sole purpose only to improve the bottom line of the food industry.
Howdy, howdy, everybody, back on, whoa, is that too, do I come in too strong there, Lauren?
Welcome back to the Skinny Confidential, him and her show.
If you are new to the show, thank you for joining.
That clip was from our guest of the show today, Bonnie Hari, also known as The Food Babe.
On this episode, we discussed labeling, how to decipher ingredients, what to look for in ingredients, the world of food labeling and food activism.
For those of you who are new to the show, my name is Michael Bostic.
I am a serial entrepreneur and brand builder.
Most recently, the CEO and co-founder of Dear Media Podcast Network, focusing on female content of voices and across from me, staring me down because I'm coming in with too much energy.
My beautiful wife, Lauren Everett's creator of the skinny confidential.
Lauren, welcome to the show.
How much coffee have you had today?
I have actually not had so much.
coffee, but I'm wired up on Lifeline.
Baby, you look like that cartoon that hasn't slept in five years that's like on meth.
I am not on any of those things, and I will let that pass.
Yikes.
I think it has to do with my new morning routine.
I've been on it all of 2019.
Can I introduce myself?
Oh, yeah, I forgot.
Go ahead and introduce yourself.
I was derailing the show.
Oh, my gosh, you guys.
He has this new morning routine, which we'll get into because he actually wrote it down for you.
No, no, I didn't write down.
You don't know.
Okay, okay, you did.
I'm Lauren Everett's Michael's wife.
I'm a little shocked at how much energy he has today, but I'll embrace it.
I am the creator of the skinny confidential, which if Michael will let me get a word in, is a blog, a podcast, and a brand.
Taylor, I am bouncing off the walls.
So, yeah, my new morning routine, I, you know, 2019 came in and I said, I got a lot going on.
I got to step it up a notch.
I need to get my finger on the pulse of the day.
and so I have a whole new routine.
And I swear to God, this routine, I've been testing it out, and it is working wonderfully.
It's working wonderfully.
Before you get into your morning routine, I found exactly who I was thinking that you look like.
And this is who you've looked like for the last three days.
Do you remember the show Wren and Stimpy?
Yeah, of course.
Okay, well, Stimpy used to get these like really bloodshot eyes.
I thought it was Wren.
They both did.
No, no, no.
No, that's not.
See, that's Wren.
Are you sure that's Renn?
Ren's the Chihuahua.
Taylor, Ren's a chihuahua, right?
I don't know.
I think that's Stimpy.
Yeah, the cat.
Stimpy's the cat.
Are we sure, guys?
Who's Ren?
Who's Stimpy?
Hey, you know what?
For those of you that are old enough?
You're Ren.
Yeah, I do kind of feel like that.
No, I don't feel like that.
I feel good.
Never mind.
I actually feel great.
I'm going to have Mimi posted on the Instagram.
For those of you that are old enough to remember Ren and Stimpy, that show kind of
pushed the boundaries for a children's cartoon show.
You are all over the place today.
That guy had a lot of eye crust going.
I'm not got that.
All right.
Let's get back to your morning routine.
You don't even know the morning routine.
Yeah, I do know it.
I can hear it every morning at 5 a.m.
Strict.
Well, first, the day before is dependent.
I need to be lights out asleep 10 p.m.
If I get a little bit, if it goes to 10.30, I can maybe make it 11.
Fucks me up 12.
Then I'm done.
But if I go to bed at 11, I will get six hours asleep.
If I get to bed at 10, I get a full 7.
All I need is 7.
That's it.
I don't need 8.
Seven's good for me.
You are looking worse for where.
Six and a half.
I can maybe do six gets me a little bit.
But last night I got a full seven, which is why you could see I'm amped up.
Then 5 a.m. wake up right away, 5 a.m.
And what I do the night before, Lauren, I don't even if you know, you don't even know my routine.
I set my gym clothes in my little office and I creep out of the room.
I'm up so early.
Yeah, I saw that with your witty tides.
The dogs, you know everybody that has dogs.
These dogs love to fucking eat.
They love it.
And they love food.
They even look at me at 5 a.m.
They're like, we are not moving an inch.
They're not, they don't want to get up at all.
wrapped up in the barefoot dreams blanket this morning nice and warm it was raining outside i was reading
from bed you're up you're bouncing around i'm trying to meditate i ran to the gym in the porn right i might i feel like the
key to a happy marriage is two houses next door to each other i'm not a pose come over for a quick you know
babe are you kidding come over for a quick little boom boom session you know mama i'm at five a m yeah but so yeah
five a m wake up strictly has to be out of bed force myself out no matter how bad i feel just got to do it
But it's gotten a lot easier because now my body's naturally acclimated.
And then my gym clothes were set out the day before.
So the only thing I could put on is my gym clothes.
So now Lauren and I's new place has a dual level so I can go upstairs, turn the lights on,
don't bother you.
Meditate.
When working on it, guys, you know, everyone knows, listen to the show.
I'm constantly kind of had a battle of meditation.
20 minutes.
What do you think about 20 minutes, Lauren?
I think 20 minutes is a long time.
I sometimes bounce to 15.
Yeah, I don't buy that, Michael.
I'm stretching to 20 minutes.
Robert Green, who that interview will be airing soon, said that he,
does. What do he did? Like 30 or 40 minutes? He does something intense. I don't know, but I, for some reason,
I'm going to say you do 10 minutes and you're lying. I promise I do minimum 15. Okay.
Um, a time and then sometimes 20, so I'm on 20. By the time I get out, because, you know,
sometimes it takes me time to get dressed. It's 530, 530. Okay, done meditation. And then I will
journal for a little while or read for 30 minutes. In your journal, what does it say? I love my wife. I love
my wife. That's my decoy journal. Oh, you have a decoy journal. I read it the other day.
Just snuck a peek.
That's the decoy.
That's how I get some boom boom going.
I get the decoy out there.
And then 6 a.m. boom on the road to the gym.
It's got to be out.
And what do you do?
Rain or shine?
Someone that is a skinny confidential reader
snapped Mimi a pitcher of you running to the gym at 5.30 in the morning.
Well, that's a little creepy.
No, you're a little creepy for running to the gym.
You know what?
Today I was fully committed.
I didn't realize it was like kind of just drizzling a little bit.
But during the middle of it, it started pouring rain.
So I was running up this hill.
You hate when a one raindrop gets on your hair.
I'm sure that didn't work out well.
No, because I have a windbreaker now, and it's rainproof.
I don't like when I go out and we're not in, okay.
Anyways, get to Equinox, 30 minute minimum, 45, but I do circuit training the whole time.
Then, by the time that's done, I walk back to the house, sometimes have a green juice or a smoothie.
Now we're talking at 7 a.m.
By 7.30, I'm dressed and ready to go out the door.
But I have, my office doesn't open here at Dear Media until 9 a.m.
So I have an hour and a half ahead of everybody.
Emails.
Thank you for your whole life story, Michael.
We got it.
At 7.30, I'm kicking you out of the house because your energy is way too high for me.
I like to wake up like a cat. You know that. So you can leave at 7.30 and I can have the house to myself to wake up, do my workout, meditate, maybe walk to get a cappuccino with cinnamon and chill out.
But did you see, see, you haven't even seen this, have you?
No, I don't know what that is. See, I've talked about it on the show before. Oh, is that a bulletproof whatever?
No, this is my, I've talked about it before. It's way of life. You know, I've done it on a few other episodes where it's a habit track.
So every day I put in my habits and I have to hit these things.
So it's like water protein greens early up, read stoicism, meditating, writing, go to the gym.
Oh, every day do you have to do 100 abs, 100 pushups?
You guys.
What does that tap say?
You guys.
What does that say?
What compliment?
I don't say.
Every day.
Every day.
Every day.
Yesterday I gave you a compliment.
I wrote in my notes that you did one of the best interviews you ever did.
Oh.
What about the day before?
I had a, I have one here that's got a double compliment.
That's when I got it in that one day or the morning.
I said you got a double, you know, you got a little, you got a verbal and a physical
compliments.
So those are the best type of compliments for you.
You told me I was tight.
Anyways, we're getting on my tanctuary.
Not tight, not in my vagina, tight body.
We make it both places.
You know what?
In there it says don't drink alcohol and tonight you're having wine.
I am not.
Yeah, you are.
Yeah, you are.
Because it's our anniversary kind of.
It is not our anniversary.
Yes, it is Michael.
Women will turn any Caucasian.
11 years ago, you asked me out at U of A and you asked, you asked, you asked,
me on a date. So today is our anniversary. I asked you to come up to my
fraternity. And I said no. So yeah, tonight's our
anniversary. So I'm hoping that you're going to order a bottle of
Brinello to celebrate and have a couple of Sips. Maybe so, maybe so. Thank you.
Depends what I'm promised. All right. Let's get into this episode. It's a good one. It's
with Vani Hari of Food Babe. Okay. You guys love the food babe. You've all been
messaging me about it. You're so excited for this interview. I actually met Bonnie
probably like six years ago.
Voni Hari is the creator of The Food Babe, and for most of her life, she ate anything she wanted.
She was a candy addict, she drank soda, never ate green vegetables, and went to tons of fast food
restaurants.
Now her life is completely changed.
She's found a new inspiration for healthy living, and she has a drive and energy to investigate
foods.
She gets to the bottom of ingredients.
And in this interview, we get real specific.
also has a product line called Truevani and she has two books, guys. So definitely check those out.
And with that, let's welcome. I want to say the names of her books. Vani has a product line called
Truvani and she has two books, The Food Babe Way and Feeding You Lies, How to Unravel the Food
Industry's Playbook and reclaim your health. With that, let's welcome Vani to the show.
This is the skinny confidential, him and her. People, I'm telling you, I've actually searched your name
or searched Food Babe in my podcast app to hear podcast on you.
So you'd be surprised.
But like you said, Lauren's really fortunate because she has an amazing co-host.
I don't know.
That being said, Food Babe is in the studio.
Welcome into the studio.
Happy to have you in here.
We're kicking it right into gear.
You wanted the compliment to be on air, didn't you?
I wanted the compliment on air.
You love a compliment.
Yeah, I get this very limited in my life.
I don't get that many, so I'll take them.
All right, Bonnie, we're going to get right into it.
How did you get into investigating the food industry?
That is such a long answer to that question that I want to give, but I'm not going to give that answer.
What I'm going to say is that, you know, for most of my life, I was sick.
I grew up with two immigrant Indian parents that came here, really trusting of the American food supply.
And in order to fit in, they let us eat all the American food, right?
Any kind of fast food we wanted to eat, any kind of processed food we wanted to eat.
I shunned my mother's homemade Indian cooking.
so that I would eat Salisbury steak and have NutraGrain bars like everybody else at school
and, you know, luncheables and all of that mess.
And as a result, I was just really always sick.
I had eczem all over my face, asthma, always had like some stomach issue going on,
never felt really well about myself.
And in my early 20s, I finally hit a breaking point.
I was working for a big six consulting firm that put me on the road and I was trying to
traveling on this like lavish expense account. And I was basically eating whatever they brought in
so that we would work through breakfast, lunch, and dinner. So we would have these big spreads of like
muffins and donuts in the morning and bagels. And then at lunch we would have, you know,
huge spreads of like Italian food. And then, of course, they'd have like a dessert table at the end,
like taramisu or whatever. And then at dinner, they'd have barbecue. And then in the
middle of the night, because we were still working, they'd bring in like more donuts. I mean,
it was just a smorgasbordage work of like gluttony just so that we could work and be like, you know,
full of sugar and caffeine and we would just go and work and bill ours to the client.
And we ended up being like the project of the year that year and of course doing this amazing project.
But as a result of all that work, I got really sick and ended in the hospital with appendicitis.
You know, back then they said appendicitis is like random.
It can happen to anybody.
You don't need your appendix.
like all of these things, right? And the new data, all the new data on it is pretty fascinating how
your appendix actually populates your gut with good bacteria and you actually do need it.
There is like a...
I don't have an appendix either.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Anyway, so...
Fuck my appendix.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You need some probiotics.
So I was sitting in the hospital room recovering from this. I was in my early 20s.
I was like wanting to like just be out with my friends and meet guys and like hang out and like, you know,
feel good about myself, but I felt awful about myself. And so I just made health a commitment. I said,
you know what? Health is going to become my number one priority. I'm not going to make any job or boss
or anybody get in my way of this. And so I started to channel all this energy that I learned in
high school where I was a top-tier debater. I was like number one in state three years in a row
and, you know, recruited a college to go and debate. And back then when we were debating, there,
you know, there wasn't Google and you couldn't just Google stuff to find out like,
evidence of to support your facts, right? So you had to go to the library and actually go through
the microfiche and print out stuff and carry big large tubs of different papers and evidence and all
this stuff to different debate tournaments across the country when I'd compete. And so I did the same
thing with my health. I started with research and I just started reading these huge books on nutrition.
One of the first books I read was Conscious Eating by Gabriel Kusens. And that book still still it to me is
a Bible on how to eat. And he just, he broke it really down. He said, you know, the processed foods out
there are dead. They're dead foods. There's nothing of life to them. And you need to really eat
an abundance of raw fruits and vegetables and, you know, some cook things and just kind of laid out
this lifestyle. And so I started to quickly adapt my lifestyle to that. And things started to dramatically
change from me. I mean, not only did I get off of at 1.9 prescription drugs, but I was,
I completely turned around my health, my skin, my hair, my weight fell off.
I mean, everything just changed dramatically to the point where people around me were like,
whoa, whoa, whoa, what are you doing?
You know, people who grew, you know, growing up with me in Charlotte, I've lived there all my
life, I've still lived there.
People going like, wait, you weren't like that.
You were kind of like a, you know, I mean, you were always kind of cute, but, you know,
you just didn't look that great because you didn't really take care of yourself.
Boys and girls, boys and girls, we have a winner. This tastes like I'm drinking pineapple juice.
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for 15% off enjoy can you give specifics to what you did did you just add more vegetables
was there a certain fruit that you started really eating like if someone's out there and they're
listening and they feel like they're in a health crisis right now and they want to make a change can
you give like really detailed specifics to that person yeah i mean that's a really good question
and i can't tell you what the first thing i did was but i guess i guess
the thing that made the biggest impact is I took back control of my food. Instead of allowing
the office to cater in food for me, I said, you know what, I'm going to bring in lunch every
day, and I'm going to bring in breakfast. I'm going to decide what I'm going to have for breakfast.
And shortly after this health awakening, I met my husband, who I was dating at the time,
and he introduced me to oatmeal. I had never had oatmeal in my life. Literally had never had
oatmeal just was eating sugary cereals or bagels or muffins for breakfast, NutraGrain bars.
And that was one of the first things that I said, you know what, I'm just going to eat
oatmeal every day for breakfast.
And then I'm going to bring in my lunch and I'm going to cook like, you know, some grilled
chicken and have some vegetables.
And I'm just going to take back that control and start learning how to cook.
And I had to teach myself how to cook from scratch at that age because my parents just, you know,
I just, I never was in the kitchen with them in terms of like helping cook or learning
how to cook. It wasn't like a priority for them to teach me that. And because they were both working
teachers and busy themselves. And so, you know, I just wasn't involved a lot. I remember like
shelling beans and going the farmer's market with my mom and I hated that. I just, I don't know,
I didn't like anything about healthy lifestyle whatsoever growing up and started to really embrace that
and started to just learn about fruits and vegetables and started to just incorporate more into my diet.
But I think where I really made the dramatic change was when I stopped eating processed foods.
When I, and I didn't like completely stop eating all processed foods, but the majority of ones that, you know, I would be snacking on the Oreos, the Doritos, the processed foods that are at fast food.
We're like, we're talking about the extreme processed foods here.
Like what category is that is like junk food?
Yeah.
And I mean, and I would even say like right now, like, and we can get into this, but, you know, I have a new from writing my my new book.
feeding you lies. I have a new found awareness of just how bad processed food in general is,
even organic processed food. And just the way it's produced with the machinery it touches,
the plastics it touches, the things that get leach into it, the contamination from non-conventional
or non-organic and conventional foods that get contaminated with organic food. I mean, just all of
that in the awareness that I've learned from starting my own food line, Truvani, I see what
what's going on in the marketplace, and it is just strengthened my resolve so much to just stay
away from anything that has been mass produced.
So let's talk about it a little bit, because you're basically single-handedly taking
on the entire food industry.
I was Googling you before, and I was trying to figure out, okay, where to start here.
You've even taken on the Obama administration.
You've really kind of gone after.
Let's see.
Chick-Pillet, Chip-Polet, Chippole, Kraft, all of the mass, like, food producers.
Where does this drive come from?
how do you decide who you want to debate or kind of go after?
Yeah.
So, you know, early in my career as an activist, you know, I was just writing, sharing information
about different products and menu items and things that I had come across because of personal
experience.
Like, you know, with Obama, it was that I was a Democratic national delegate for Obama to
become president.
I really believed in his presidency.
and I still do.
But one of the promises that he made during his presidents or during his campaign was that he
would challenge the administration to label genetically engineered ingredients.
And he couldn't get that done because of just the lobbying efforts of the food and chemical
industry.
And Michelle Obama, too, tried to make that her platform.
And she also couldn't get as far as I know she wanted to go because of the,
persuasion and the, you know, the influence that the big junk food companies have, the
coax, the crafts, the Kellogg's, the General Mills of the world. And so, you know, for me,
it was about just, you know, pushing the envelope and in using my stature as a delegate at the Democratic
National Convention to protest in favor of, you know, labeling genetically modified ingredients.
because I think the labeling and knowing what's in your food makes you become more aware.
And, you know, the reason why this was so important to me was not the genetically modified food
itself. It wasn't the actual seed that they were pot. Do you think labeling will really like
solve everything? Because let's take like the cigarette industry, for example. You go to Europe and
literally you want to smoke a pack of cigarettes over there and there's literally a dead baby on the,
on the pack. There's people with open throats. Do you think like labeling is going to solve or do you think
there needs something else? No. So labeling was like the first step to creating awareness.
right? And what happened with this whole labeling campaign, which is so beautiful to watch,
is not only with Prop 65 that was happening here in California, that lost, right? There was a
proposition that was proposed to label GMOs here in California, but it lost, but it was such a
widespread mass campaign of awareness teaching people about GMOs that people actually know what Roundup
is and Monsanto is now. And, you know, Monsanto's being sued.
for the fact that their product is linked to cancer, and they're losing in court and, you know,
awarding individuals millions and millions of dollars because of this. And so, you know,
this awareness has allowed people to become cognizant of the mass amount of chemicals being sprayed
on our food, and so we can start to hopefully reduce that. So that's really the point of labeling,
right? It's awareness. And it's the same point of why, like, for example, some of my campaigns,
I've able to target one specific ingredient.
Like, for example, Subway was using this chemical called azodicarbonamide.
And it was a chemical that was banned all over the world.
If you used it in Singapore, you got fine $450,000.
It was a chemical that when it's a dough conditioner.
So when you have a piece of bread, right, there's those little itty, bitty, bitty,
air pockets that you see all throughout the bread.
And if you bake bread at home, you know, sometimes the air pocket.
it's big over here and small over there and you break it open and it's just it's not like uniform.
Well, Subway wants uniform bread across all of their locations.
So they use a dough conditioner like azodicarbonamide to create that look and feel of the bread
and also to decrease the amount of time it takes for it to rise and leaven.
So it's a cost-cutting measure as well.
And so they're using this chemical when it's inhaled can cause asthma,
but also when it breaks down and is heated, it can turn it.
into a carcinogen, and they were using this chemical here in the United States, but not elsewhere
in the world because it was banned and regulated in other places in the world. And so I, you know,
started a petition to get subway to remove this chemical to increase the awareness of this
unethical behavior that the food industry has when it comes to the regulation of chemicals. When they
find out that they can't use a chemical in another country or in another place because it's harmful,
they should take it out of all their products no matter where they're being sold.
Instead, they use the government regulations to their advantage to continue to sell these chemicals to us.
But don't you, I get all this, but don't you think some of the bigger issue maybe here is just us as human beings as individuals?
Like, for example, once in a while and you're going to hate me for this.
I'll go and eat fast food.
I didn't and out of day.
She's not going to hate you for this.
You're not going to like this.
Once in a while.
You're not going to like this.
More than once in a while for you.
I fundamentally know, like I'll get a, this.
up every day five going the gym. I'm working out. I'm eating, we're drinking the mountain water.
We're doing all this stuff. Fine. 90% of my time I'm healthy, right? And that's fine.
Don't you think that there's like some middle ground here? Do you think I can never have that?
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that's Skillshare.com slash TSC. Again, go to Skillshare.com slash TSC. Enjoy. I don't think it's
really about whether you can have it or not. I think the problem that I've had with the way we've been
taught about food is that we're not really taught about what's really actually in it.
You know, when we take a class at school about nutrition, we're not taught about ingredients
in processed foods, but that's the majority of our diets as Americans.
You know, we're not taught about what these chemicals are doing.
I mean, the fact that the majority of chemicals, 99% of them that have been invented over
the last 50 years has been invented for one sole purpose and one sole purpose only to improve
the bottom line of the food industry, not improve our health, not to make us avoid
disease, not to help us.
But don't you think the fundamental problem here is that we're just being gluttonous as a society?
Like maybe like I know back to my point that I don't.
Here's where I'm going to disagree with you actually.
Don't.
Like I know I should not be eating fast food every day.
So I don't.
It's all in moderation.
I think that like as a society, people have gone over the edge where they're eating these
things way too much.
Here's the problem.
Here's the other problem is that I go to the market and I turn over everything and I look at
the ingredients because I want to be informed when I'm buying something and I'm
using it day after day. Where I get pissed off is when they sneak shit in or when they call
something, you know, maybe olive oil, but it's not cold. You know, I want to know exactly what I'm
eating as a consumer and I feel like they're lying to you on the back of the label. Yeah, so that's where
I get annoyed. There's some really good examples of that actually in my new book. You know, I talk about,
you know, one really popular bar that just got bought by Kellogg's and RX bar. And they, you know,
they list the ingredients on the front and they say no BS. And I was like so,
excited because Whole Food CEO reached out to me a couple years ago and he says, hey, what are the new
trends that I need to be aware of in packaging and ingredients? What do you see? You know, it just was picking my
brain. I said, you're going to start seeing the ingredient label on the front of the packages. People are
going to actually going to list their ingredients in big letters on the front of packages. And that's what
Arix Bar ended up doing. And so I was so excited to see this. And then I turn over the package to read the
ingredient label just to see if it's true. And then they're sneaking in natural flavors. And
Natural flavors aren't anything but natural.
It creates this pop in your brain for you to get this boost of flavor, for you to remember that flavor,
crave it and just keep continuing to consume that flavor, and it makes food that wouldn't otherwise taste good taste good.
Or special seasoning, or natural flavors or preservatives, or what's that, sunflower seed?
There's like an oil that starts with an S.
I forgot what it's called.
Swo oil?
Yes.
Or they sneak soy.
soy and stuff. I mean, I was taking a vitamin shot the other day and it was, it says vitamin C,
it's the best of the best. They're comparing it to an IV, blah, blah, blah. I turn it around and it says,
it says, um, leptons in it. So I think I'm saying that right. Is that what it's called leptons?
Lectins. Lectins. And I'm just like, you can't even take a vitamin shot without getting,
sneaking something in. So that's where I get frustrated and I agree with, with how you're really,
you're being a crusader for so many different people. Because it's, it's, I want to know what's
my food and I want to know exactly what I'm eating.
And then if I choose to make the choice to go to McDonald's drive-through, that's on me.
You know?
Yep.
Yep.
I'm not disagreeing with all of that.
I'm just fundamentally thinking that as a society, we've just gone over the edge where we've
become gluttonous, right?
People are eating so much fast food.
They're just, we'll take all this junk food eating and eat.
Like fundamentally, people just need to understand, okay, everything in moderation.
And what's happening is we're going way over the edge and we're blaming the food industry,
which does play a part.
but us as humans play an even larger part.
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, like, I feel like so much of our food that is coming from, like, our main crops,
like corn, soy, canola, cotton seed is being, you know, used to create these processed foods
and used to create fast food.
And, you know, that's what the majority of Americans are eating because these farms are being,
you know, farm crops are being subsidized.
And so, you know, I think the larger problem is, like, getting to the root of it, right?
We need our government officials to start subsidizing like real fruits and vegetables and like everything in like, you know, an abundance of a variety of vitamins and minerals that we need in our diet.
But but also I think the fundamental thing that hasn't happened up until now is that this awareness is starting to take place.
We're in this food revolution where people are finally paying attention to what's in their food.
They care about it.
They care about buying organic.
I mean, that's the largest growing segment of any food.
sector right now. You know, it continues to grow every single year. You know, we have the opportunity
to use social media to our advantage. And, you know, we are the voices, you know, no longer do
traditional media get this message out. We can get it out ourselves. And that's what's so powerful
about the food babe community is that they not only care about themselves. They care about
getting this message out and educating other people about what's actually happening. You know,
you talk about McDonald's. You know, McDonald's French fries is another great example of just the
disparity across nations. So like, you know, here in the United States, there's a slew of chemicals
that they use to make McDonald's French fries. One of those chemicals is dimethyl polysiloxane. It's used
in silicuddy. You want some di betama masana fanacana-cana fries, Michael? That's my favorite one.
How do you say that? I'm going to say that every time. How do you say it one more time?
Dimethylylacin. You want some of those fries? You know, it's preserved in formaldehyde.
It's definitely not an ingredient you want to be consuming. But in Europe, they, in the UK,
they're making these McDonald's French fries with three ingredients.
Potatoes, oil, and dextrose, a little sugar. That's just sugar.
And then you add the salt after the facts.
You can actually regulate how much salt you get.
And here in the United States, we have a totally different recipe because they can get away with it here.
And I just think it's a completely unethical thing that these companies are doing.
And so these campaigns that I've started have just been to point this out.
So people are aware, and they can't be so trusting of all the foods they're out there.
I mean, there's this underlying assumption that all the food that we eat is safe, that it's been tested by the FDA, that someone's looking after us.
But the FDA is relying on the food companies themselves to test these ingredients.
And, of course, the food companies are going to say they're safe because they're making money off of it.
I mean, Michael, don't you think that it's fucked up that I will go to a grocery store?
And I go and I buy strawberries, and I think I'm being safe.
And then I go and I buy blueberries and canelope.
And then I find out that it's, and I don't know if this is the problem.
proper verbiage that it's fake it's gmo's it's not even like it's not even a real organic strawberry
you almost have to go to like the farmer's market well luckily there's no as far as i know of any
gmo strawberries out in the marketplace oh that's good to know okay maybe i'm talking cantaloupe corn
what what else am i talking so you're so the the main gmo crops are corn soy canola zucchini squash
papaya and cotton seed so if you go to the grocery store thinking you're being healthy getting a
And you take it home to eat it.
And it's not even like, is that the proper verbiage?
It's not a real papaya?
Well, no, it is.
It's just, you know, the seed that was used to create that papaya has been engineered to do something
different than nature intended.
Got it.
Yeah.
And it's patented.
It's patented technology.
Okay.
Let's talk about the brands that you like.
If someone's out there, they're listening, what are some legit brands that you
could just recommend to the audience that they should go check out that you love?
Oh, that is a really good question.
So, again, you know, I have the strong resolve to, like, really reduce the consumption of my processed foods.
But, you know, one of the companies that I've loved, and it's a pasta brand that I feed my daughter, is tolerant.
It's a red lentil pasta.
They make little elbow versions.
So they look like little macaroni.
They make peni.
They make retoni, like, little spiral shapes.
And she loves it.
And it's 100% one ingredient, organic lentil flour.
You're going to get some tolerant tonight.
Yeah, it is amazing. And it has like, I don't know, 20 grams of protein or something ridiculous. And it fills her up, fills me up. I love it. I put some kale in there, you know, and I use, I love this sauce. It is so hard to find, but it is amazing. It's this biodynamic Italian sauce from Italy. It's called Yellow Barn. And it is phenomenal. I can eat it right out of the jar. I'm writing this down. I can, it's the best on the market. And any other brands?
So that's just something that I have a staple in my house.
I'm trying to think what else that I typically eat.
It doesn't need to be a brand either.
When you go grocery shopping, what are you looking for?
Yeah, I'm staying away from all the package process stuff.
I'm eating a lot of fruits and vegetables.
I buy organic meat whenever I can.
I like wild salmon.
Every single day, I'm having pretty much the same thing for breakfast.
I make my steel-cut oats in a crock pot so it's ready to go.
first thing in the morning.
And I make sure those are organic, of course, because non-organic oats are sprayed with glyphosate,
you know, sprayed with Roundup.
And so, you know, they're harvested with that.
So it's really important to buy organic.
And there's been a new study that came out recently that shows, you know, that this is actually
actually really occurring in major brands, like Quaker Oats, you know, one of the biggest brands owned by Pepsi.
So, yeah, I have that every morning.
I had my ground flax seed that I grind myself and I store in my refrigerator.
That's amazing for breastfeeding.
I'm still breastfeeding my daughter.
So it's amazing for that.
It's amazing for women's health.
It's really great for cleaning you out.
So, you know, keeping your gut and check.
And then, you know, I always have like either a green smoothie or green juice every
single day and I keep the fruit content down to a very minimum.
Like my green juices, I almost never get fruit in them.
maybe just a little lemon, but that's it.
And then for lunch, I always have a big salad.
And so I'm not eating a lot of processed things, even the most probably, even the steel cut oats are the least processed oats you can buy.
And then in the afternoon, I do eat something sweet.
Like, I like something good, you know.
And so I love organic dried mango.
So peeled is a brand that I buy.
I love that brand.
Yeah, I can eat the whole bag in one sitting.
It's so bad.
So how much of this, like, say, is it, is your policy like, and every?
chemicals bad or is it there's some that can make like how much of this is based you look
and say okay there's a list of these chemicals like do any make the cut i don't think they're all bad i
think that there isn't a necessary reason to consume a lot of them now there are some that you know
i think you can really there's there's enough processed foods out there right now that are being
created without any of these like industrial chemicals that you can
can still eat processed food and still get by without eating them. So I don't think they're necessary
for your human diet. I personally don't want to be an experiment of the food industry. I don't
want my body to be hijacked by the food industry. That's one of the reasons why I avoid natural
flavors. Now, there is a product that is like cracked to me. It's the Annie's Chocolate
Bunnies. Those things are like cracked to me. I cannot stop eating them until the box is gone.
and they use natural flavor in them, and I know that's the reason why,
because there's just no other reason why all the things on this planet that I will eat,
that is organic, you know, I have that problem with cheez-ets and chips.
There's probably something in cheez-ets that I don't even know.
There's an organic version of cheese-its.
The reason I ask all these questions, and I do this with everybody,
like, you know, we just had Dr. Gundry on,
and we'll probably get into some of his takes soon.
But there are so many extreme examples on both sides that I've seen gone wrong.
like, you know, somebody eats really, really unhealthy. We all know what that looks like. But then I've
seen the other side of it where someone thinks they're eating extremely healthy. They cut out all processed
foods. They only eat organic. And a lot of those people end up having a ton of problems. You know
what's difficult, Lauren? Women. Really difficult. You know what's even more difficult? Women
shopping for men on Valentine's Day. We don't need flowers. We don't need chocolates. We need a couple
things. I think you know what I'm talking about. But if you want to get a gift, you know, for me,
And if you, for the women out there that are thinking about a gift for the man in their life,
we have the answer for you.
And that is woo more play.
That is the answer, ladies, that woo more play.
Because that's going to lead to the boom boom in the bedroom.
Here's what you do.
You take candy hearts from Rite Aid.
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And then you write on a little post-it note, see you tonight and do like a lipstick.
Okay, that's all you have to do for the guy. It's so easy. It's so efficient. And it's a win-win for
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We are excited about it. The men that I have given it to my friends, the ladies that I've
given it to, their friends, they are experiencing Wu on a whole new level, which means they're
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Okay, Michael, let's not get, like, so technical about it, guys.
Just go check out woo moreplay.com, and you can see for yourself, there's all these natural
ingredients in it, like stevia for a little taste.
We got a little beeswax for a little grip, and then some vanilla essence for a little
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No, I don't think those people have a ton of problems because they stop processed food.
I think it's because they stop food groups.
So they eliminate, like they become vegan or they are on a keto diet or they go to some extreme
where they're eliminating food groups.
I think some of those people end up getting sick because they end up doing that kind of stuff.
I have never known anyone to get sick because they eliminated processed food.
Okay, so let's talk about it a little.
So maybe they cut out all red meat all of a sudden, no, done.
Or they cut out all gluten.
That's where you see the problems coming in.
Well, no.
I mean, I'm saying when anything is taken to the extreme, like reducing or removing processed foods from your diet, I don't think is extreme.
Because still, you have the abundance of everything, everything nature intended,
everything on this earth that we're meant to eat, you still can eat all of it, right?
Every nut and seed and fruit and vegetable and meat that's out there that's being produced.
Like, you can eat it all.
So I don't feel like that's a, I'm still eating butter.
I'm still eating bread, right?
But I'm just eating homemade bread, right?
Or Ezekiel bread.
That's another product that I buy that I love.
Okay, I liked Ezekiel bread too.
And then someone told me there's soy in it.
Is that true?
Yeah, there is a soybean.
It's a ferment, not a fermented, but a sprouted soybean, right?
And some of the products, right?
They do use that as one of the ingredients in one of the breads or whatever,
but there's certain breads that don't have it too.
Okay.
And I was also going to ask you about dairy.
You know, with dairy, it's like, you know, we don't need to have a cup of milk at breakfast
and yogurt as a snack and then a cheese stick later on and then have pizza for dinner.
and then have ice cream for dessert.
Like that's way too much dairy, right?
No one should be eating that much dairy, period.
It's just, it's not intended for that purpose.
And so I actually tell a story in the Food Babe Way about how my ancestors who grew up with dairy
used dairy.
You know, they had one cow that they shared the entire, whatever that cow produced in terms of
milk shared with the entire street or village at the time.
And, you know, and they would use as much as they could and they'd make a couple of desserts
with it.
and they would use yogurt and make yogurt for it to like dip their, you know,
prompties and rotis and everything with back in India, right?
And that's how, and they would make butter with it.
And that's it.
You know, that's what they would do or ghee.
And that's all you need it for.
You don't need to eat it at every single meal.
And so I think there's just, you know, we have government subsidies going to the dairy industry
and the dairy industry wants us to consume milk.
They have actually an abundance of cheese to the point where they want school children to
to eat so much dominoes. It's just going out of style, right? So it's like, you know, we have a problem
with, like, our government telling us and subsidizing, advertising, in media, and I'm programming
to our, to our schools and to, you know, getting it ingrained into our lifestyle that we need to be
eating this much dairy all the time. And that's, and that's part of the issue. And so, like, for me,
I use dairy like a condiment, right? I don't think it needs to be eating at every meal.
So how are you going to balance your strong views on processed foods with being a mom?
Because that's going to be hard because I feel like if you say, no, you can't have anything,
then that almost is going to sneak off.
Yeah, like they're going to be wanting to sneak things.
Like, what's your strategy there?
I've seen it happen.
We have a lot of friends that have young kids and the kids, you know, they're under strict diets
and they get away and they go with their friends or they go to the fair.
They do something in the kid immediately going for the candy,
immediately going for the junk because they're so restricted.
Yeah.
So it's funny.
I, for the first year of Harley's life, like I did first year and a half or so, I did really well
with, like, kind of like shielding her from processed foods, right?
And then she saw, like, my husband munching down on some, he's like a chipaholic,
munching down on some chips.
Yeah, they're organic chips, but whatever, you know, munching down on these chips.
And she's like, want one?
Want one?
And she just thinks it looks so cool.
It's this bag, it's bright colored.
You know, he's crunching on something.
And she just got her molars in, so she's like, I can crunch now.
And so she just wants these chips and she loves them, you know.
And so what I do is I do a really good job of making sure that I give her a lot of choices
in terms of fruits, vegetables, and what she's eating.
And I teach her about every single fruit and every single vegetable.
And I let her pick foods from our garden and make them and make them with us and see how we're cooking them and preparing them.
And, you know, she's only two, but, you know, she sits down with us at fancy restaurants and we'll sit there for the entire.
meal of an hour and a half to two hours and sit like an adult and not get up and run around
or do anything because like we have really ingrained having a very conscious time eating
breakfast lunch and dinner with her. That's something that I do almost every single day.
And yeah, it prevents me from being more productive at work or more productive at other things
in my life. But it's so important for me to instill those like great eating habits in her.
So when she thinks about eating, she sits down. She mindfully eats. It's not like eating on
the go or like shoving something in her mouth just to keep her full or quiet or, you know,
entertained. And so, you know, a really good example of the way that I kind of want a parent is the
other day at the airport. I was trying to entertain her at the airport, right? And we're waiting for
a flight. And I said, hey, let's just go into this little store. And sometimes I let her play
with like the stuff animals or whatever they're selling in the stores. And there was this huge display
of candy. And she was like, you know, yeah, this looks cool to play with. So she's picking up butterfingers and
cat cats and York peppermint patties and Snickers bars and all that. And I just said to her and I said,
Hey, Harley, these things are yucky. They are so yucky. And she looked at me and she said,
yucky. And I said, yes, they are yucky. This is what mom has made her mission in life to be is to
teach people not to eat these foods because they're so yucky. And she goes, yucky. Okay. Not yummy.
Yucky. And I was like, yeah, that's right. And so, you know, I didn't get into all the
whether her level of understanding is not quite there yet in terms of understanding that,
but I will. And if I can just educate her so she knows the truth about the food in terms of
what's actually in there and how it serves the body and doesn't serve the body, then I'm going to
let her make her own choices. And she's going to make bad choices and I'm going to have to
cringe and look the other way. And I'm just going to have to grin and bear it. But then I know I've
kind of done my part. And it's the same thing I deal with like my family that doesn't want to change,
right? You know, everybody has people in their family. They want to change and they can't.
They're the hardest people to change. But you can only lead by example. And, you know, I, you know,
I'm in charge of the groceries, right? I'm in charge of the groceries at the house. I see what comes
in and out. You know, occasionally my husband will sneak shit in. But, you know, I, you know, I, you know,
I, you know, I, you know, I have, I have some really great choices.
that kid, remember that movie heavyweights when you like hid the stuff in the bedpost and then like had the secret stash? That's how I'm in the house. Yeah, but you're not, he's not attached to food really. He has no attachment to food. So that's, that's an interesting thing. Like, I feel like I associate like salsa with just heaven. He doesn't have any kind of attachment to food. So that's what I always say about him. That's why I feel like you can have a snickers and move on. It's not that I don't have attachment to food. I appreciate good food. I just, it's not what I don't base my life around food. I look at it as kind of like fuel. But if, but again, if we go to Italy and we're in a really nice restaurant,
or we go down the street.
Like last time we had Italian at Danana.
Danana's, Danana's great.
And like, I'll get all into it.
But I'm not sitting around thinking about my next meal for sure.
So you've built a massive brand.
Just on the business side, what is a day to day for you?
Is there, I'm sure every day is different.
But kind of if someone's out there and they're listening and they want to, they have
something that they're inspired by like you, where would they start?
So every day, let's just take a typical day.
So I wake up in the morning and I usually allow my daughter to be my alarm clock.
And again, I'm still breastfeeding.
So the first thing I do is breastfeed my daughter.
And then I have lemon water, lemon with warm water and cay and pepper every single morning without fail.
And even my daughter knows to wait until I have it, right?
And she's so funny.
She started to take a couple of sips here and there of it, which is really cute.
And she goes, spicy.
And so then I have an espresso.
I have my steel cut oats.
And then about 30 minutes or so later,
I am off to go work out.
So either my husband's watching or I have someone come in to watch Harley for that hour or so.
And I have to work out every single day from my mind.
Like otherwise I'm a big ball of anxiety.
So I have to work out every single day.
And I do like various things like Orange Theory.
I go to a place called Hilliard Studio Method.
That's really awesome in Charlotte.
I go to yoga, hot yoga.
I love that.
And then I have a little gym in my house too.
And then I come back, shower.
and go straight to my office.
And I typically try to, you know, before Trubani started, I typically only tried to have meetings
like one or two days a week and have the rest of time to do creative work, to actually
write and like think of the next investigation, like investigate, do the research, make the phone
calls to experts, do all of that stuff.
Now things are way different with Trubani.
Since I started Trubani, you know, it's a product company that we started that believes in real food.
without added chemicals, products without toxins, and labels without lies. Right now, I think the goal
with Truvani is to create as many products as we can as with the highest integrity possible.
I mean, we did the impossible this year, which was to create a protein powder with like five
ingredients, five ingredients with the cleanest pea protein that is available. Let me ask you this.
I imagine you're crusading against a lot of big companies, a lot of money behind them, powerful
companies. When I think about you, I think there's like that guy that's watching you in the car,
on the radio, radio back to Heckwoods?
That's definitely happened.
I wonder, has anyone ever, yeah, what is the,
has there any been any moments where you felt like, you know,
this is, this is maybe dangerous to talk about or this is, you know,
making me feel uncomfortable.
There's people that are like some powerful people looking at what I'm doing.
Yeah, I mean, I think the biggest, you know,
there's been challenges where I've definitely felt threatened and scared,
but I think the biggest point where I was probably upset the most in my life
in terms of an activist was actually after I was featured on,
the cover of Experience Life magazine. So after I was featured on the cover of Experience Life magazine,
it was like so cool, first of all, to see yourself on the cover of a magazine, but it was the food
issue. And that was really happy. I was really happy about that because we were talking about
really important issues in that magazine and just getting the mission out there about the ingredients
and food and getting people to pay attention to these chemicals and getting them to pay attention
to what they're eating. And it just was really excited moment for me. And what happened was, you know,
Their entire website presence on Facebook got taken over by an astroturf campaign paid for by the PR industry.
We don't know exactly who paid for it or who orchestrated it.
But it was partly a hate group that I have on Facebook that just sits and hates on me all day.
And then partly, you know, actual experts and other people that are paid by the food industry to like say that I can't believe you had this person on your cover.
I'll never buy your magazine again.
You know, your magazine is shit.
You know, all of these really, really bad things about Experience Life magazine.
People in an uproar about me being on the cover, right?
They've never had anything like this ever happened with anybody that they ever put on a cover of a magazine.
And it got so bad that these trolls went to their Amazon rating and took their magazine that was at like four and a half stars down to two stars.
And I felt so helpless because I was like, first of all, the whole experience life magazine opportunity was amazing.
They flew me out to L.A. They treated me with such respect and so nice.
The lady who does like Gwyneth Paltrow's hair did my hair.
I just felt like so like proud to be part of that magazine, right?
It was just such an amazing opportunity.
And they just stole, you know, the spotlight.
And they also stole like the moment from me.
It ended up being the most sold magazine for them that year, which was incredible.
But it also brought down their brand value on Amazon.
And it was a moment where I couldn't, you know, there was nothing, you know, other than, you know, trying to fight this kind of astro-turf troll battle online.
There was nothing much I could do.
And if I were to spend my energy doing that, I would be taking my focus off the willing and focus off, you know, get, I mean, the whole reason they're doing that is to keep, you know, you know,
to take your eye off the ball, right? They don't want you to figure out the next investigation
or the next company to expose. They want you to, like, fight them, right? Get into this, like,
petty bullshit, right? And so that's what was really hard for me to handle. And that was, like,
the start of just probably six months of a ruthless PR campaign to take me down in the media.
And, you know, they tried to paint me any which way they could. In the New York Times, the Atlantic,
these giant publications.
They try to paint me as a pseudoscientist as someone who didn't have a science degree,
so I didn't know what I was talking about.
And it just made me so mad because, like, you do not need to have a science or nutrition
degree to know how to eat or even to research how to eat.
I agree with not needing to have a degree, but how much of this is based in science,
I guess it's from my own knowledge.
Yeah, I mean, some of the harmful effects of these chemicals,
there are studies that have been conducted and reviewed.
by several nonprofit organizations, not in anyone can read those and talk about them and expose them.
So it's like, you know, just like a journalist, you know, research is something and writes about it.
It's the same way that I was doing it. But, you know, they were trying to paint me as a person that didn't know much and paint me just as a pretty face.
And that really angered me because, you know, that was never my intention to use the name Food Babe to do that.
It was really just a cute name to name a blog.
I never knew I was going to be turning into this activist.
It was really just to share how I'd turn my life around in my health.
How do you deal with trolls on the internet?
Because it sounds like you've had your fair share of them.
Oh my gosh.
Yes.
So the first thing I did after this was I turned off Google Alerts.
So I didn't want anything that was positive or negative about me to affect my daily work.
Because my mission comes from within.
My mission comes from my own.
integrity of like teaching the world like they can eat healthier, right? They're things that they need
to know about the food industry. They need to know about their playbook, how they use these tactics,
these astro turf campaigns. They don't only use these astro turf campaigns, by the way, on activists.
They use it to promote ideas as well and to advance their agenda and comment sections of every
major media outlet there is. You know, any, I mean, in the political realm, you see it all the time.
I mean, you see all the fake news that Facebook has tried to combat.
And it's the same thing.
And it's, you know, they use these front groups and trade groups.
And I talk about this in Feeding You Lies, my next book about, you know, what specifically
they're doing and how to safeguard yourself and become your own health investigator.
And when you see a headline, for example, I mean, there was a headline recently,
and I'll get back to your question.
But there's a headline recently that was like coconut oil is unhealthy, right?
It was everywhere.
Did you see it?
I didn't see that.
Oh, okay.
Because, I mean, it was on the front of the USA today.
I mean, it was everywhere.
And even my mom's texting me like, I told you so.
Like, you know, and I'm like, mom, no, no, no, no.
The American Heart Association is the person that put out this statement and their experts
that were reviewing the research cherry picked it to favor themselves because they're being
paid by the corn and canola industry.
That's what's really happening behind this.
And she's like, oh, my gosh.
And so, like, of course, I had to write about it.
And then, of course, write this book and like expose, like, when you see these headlines,
you have to dig deeper.
You have to go and see who these experts are that are telling you to eat this way because
they may have an agenda behind the scenes.
Like me, I don't have an agenda.
I want people to eat the clean as possible, like to the earth.
So there's no like, you know, I'm not trying to sell you some chemicals.
So the first thing I did was, you know, stuff to go back to your question about how I deal
with online trolls, stop Google alerts.
The second thing I did was I got a Facebook moderator so that, you know, they could handle,
you know, get rid of the riffraff because.
you know, this is, this is your community, this is your page.
It's your.
So what would be classified as a hate, like say that somebody came in, because I always
like to have a healthy debate, you come in and I'm just questioning something.
Is that, is that a troll or is that somebody that's just debating?
So, like, what is the line of troll?
Like, I understand, like, if someone's making comments about your looks or if someone's
just saying mean derogatory things, but if they're trying to enter into debate, would that
be moderated?
Would you?
Oh, no, debate's fine.
Debate's fine.
and I put an asterisk there.
Now, certain debates were started by some of these experts that were being hired by the food
industry.
And they would say to their followers, go to Food Babe's page and debate them and try to, you know,
tell them they're wrong or whatever.
And you'd see these same people come over from that page and then they would take over your
page.
Well, if we saw an AstroTurf campaign like that happening, we would just block them all.
That makes sense.
No, the reason I ask, like, so you've been labeled by some.
as a fearmonger, how do you respond to that? I think, you know, it's really interesting that people
label me as a fearmonger when we're in a situation where people are dying every single day
of cancer. And the only solution out there in the mainstream medical world is to like either
cut, poison yourself or burn. And it's a really sad situation. And to say that,
I am scaring people about processed foods or these chemicals.
I ask them to just go read the studies themselves.
Do they want to eat small doses of chemicals that are linked to cancer every single day?
You have to ask yourself that question.
I'm not here to tell you what to eat or what not to eat.
I'm here to show you the information.
And I want you to make that decision for yourself.
And that's why at the back of feeding you lies,
I take people through a very simple challenge.
And this challenge will just change your purpose.
perspective on the way you're eating and will open your eyes so dramatically, but it is so,
so simple. You just literally ask yourself three questions at every single meal. Try to do it for a
week. And the three questions are, what are the ingredients, right? You have to know what you're eating
in order to really change your health. And if you know what the ingredients are and what they're
there for and what they are and if you don't know what they are, you need to stop eating it until you
do, that will fundamentally change what you actually just.
even put on your plate. Then the second question is, are these ingredients nutritious, right?
You know, if health is your goal and you want to be the healthiest you can be,
you want to live life to your wildest dreams, because I can tell you right now, if I felt like
I did, you know, 15 years ago, I wouldn't be able to do what I'm doing today in terms of
the impact I'm making this world and following my dreams and making everything become a reality.
And so when you really achieve health, you start to see other areas of your life,
of like, oh, here's why, here's my purpose.
Here's what I need to be doing.
And this is what's going to really truly make me feel alive every single day.
But, you know, the next question you ask is, are these ingredients nutritious?
And, you know, if they're ingredients that are there that are not nutritious, you'll know that
you're eating them and it will change your awareness.
It will change your brain.
And it will, you'll start to say to yourself, well, maybe I don't need to eat that.
And then the third question you ask yourself, or where do these ingredients come from?
Where do they come from?
You know, is this, you know, is this.
you know is this white sugar that I'm eating over here that I sprinkled on my oatmeal or whatever
that way yeah I know it's you know what is it it's sugar is it nutritious uh it's really not nutrition
there's not any nutrition really in sugar and then the third question is where does it come from
oh it comes from a factory where they bleach it white it doesn't look like pure cane sugar anymore
that's like green and brown right from nature so like you start to to investigate all the different
things that you're eating on a daily basis and and you start to become aware of where things come from
Like, you know, even if you started with a piece of meat, you know it's a piece of meat,
and then you know it's probably nutritious, right?
There's a lot of macro and micronutrition in a piece of meat.
And then, you know, there's protein, there's other things.
And then where does it come from?
Is it coming from a factory farm where they're feeding old candy to those cows?
Because that's actually happening.
People don't know that.
But, you know, all the old candy has some place to go and it's being fed to our farm animals.
You know, that's one of the things that I exposed in the book as well.
And so it's, you know, it's...
All those butterfingers that you can get your daughter and now they're going to the cows.
Yeah, all the old and Halloween candy you donate.
I don't know.
What is a book, a resource, a podcast that you can recommend to our audience?
So, you know, I kind of already said it, Gabriel Kousen's Conscious Eating.
That book is just, it's so ancient, but it's so powerful.
And where can everyone find you?
Where can they find your new book?
Pimp yourself out.
Yeah, so you can find my book at Feeding.
You can find it at every major bookstore.
And it's going to open your eyes about the food industry.
It's going to reveal the entire playbook.
It's going to make you a better eater.
And if you eat, you need to read it.
If you eat, you need to read it.
So that's everyone.
Label liars beware.
You may be investigated.
Yeah.
And what's your Instagram handle?
At the food babe.
Love it.
Thank you so much for coming on.
Yeah, I loved it.
Thanks.
I'm sure you guys are running to purchase Vonny's book, and we're going to do a little giveaway here.
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