January 4th, 2010 - Barbara Feiner

If your children enjoy Nickelodeon shows like SpongeBob SquarePants, Rugrats, Drake & Josh or iCarly, they’re getting more than an entertainment break.
As I reported in June 2007, 88% of Nick’s advertising (TV, magazine, character-related) promoted junk food, according to a study conducted by the Center for Science in the Public Interest. A new CSPI study reveals a negligible improvement: 80% of Nick’s ads encourage consumption of nutritionally poor foods.
While advertisers have pledged to produce more responsible advertising campaigns, their efforts remain lackluster, and studies show children are heavily influenced by fast-food branding.
“While industry self-regulation is providing some useful benchmarks, it’s clearly not shielding children from junk-food advertising, on Nick and elsewhere,” says Dr. Margo G. Wootan, CSPI’s nutrition policy director. “It’s a modest start, but not sufficient to address children’s poor eating habits and the sky-high rates of childhood obesity.
“Nickelodeon should be ashamed that it earns so much money from carrying commercials that promote obesity, diabetes and other health problems in young children,” she adds. “If media and food companies don’t do a better job exercising corporate responsibility when they market foods to children, Congress and the FTC will need to step in to protect kids’ health.”
For Your Child’s Organic Bookshelf
- Janey Junkfood’s Fresh Adventure
- Johnny’s Journey with His Junk Food
- Junk Food June
- The Race Against Junk Food
Read More: Nickelodeon Continues to Promote Junk Food
Tags: advertising, children, Junk Food, obesity, television Posted in Health | 3 Comments »
May 12th, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
Actor Martin Sheen (left) and company will leave their West Wing offices Sunday evening as the series concludes its seven-year run. The show has been one of the coping mechanisms I’ve used to nurture my political and organic spirit of late.
President Josiah “Jed” Bartlet and a willing suspension of disbelief have allowed me to maintain a semblance of hope when I have issues with the current administration—not exactly at the top of the hit parade when it comes to the environment or laws that govern the safety of our food supply.
The West Wing reshaped our understanding of the presidency, according to Trevor and Shawn Parry-Giles, associate professors of communication at the University of Maryland and authors of The Prime-Time Presidency: The West Wing and U.S. Nationalism.

“First aired in the aftermath of the Clinton impeachment, and continuing through the 2000 election debacle, the 9/11 attacks and the war in Iraq, The West Wing provided its viewers with another layer of meaning about the presidency—one that is easily the most complex popular-culture depiction of a president and his administration ever offered,” says Trevor Parry-Giles.
“The series offered a rich and often ambivalent depiction of women, people of color, the military and politics in general,” adds Shawn Parry-Giles, who directs the university’s Center for Political Communication and Civic Leadership.
Has The West Wing made you yearn for Camelot over the last seven years? What would you say to President Bush about your concerns as an organic consumer? And which issues should Congress address as we lurch toward election season (and members fill their campaign coffers with lobbyists’ money)?
Please post your comments: straightforward, controversial, sarcastic, bemused, irritated or pissed off at this post. Make your voice heard.
NBC Photo: David Rose
Read More: Adieu, President Bartlet
Tags: environment, martin sheen, television, Television Programming, west wing Posted in Political Action | Comments Off
March 27th, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
Just a reminder that The New Medicine airs on Wednesday evening (check your local PBS listings). Hosted by the late Dana Reeve, it’s of particular interest to those who embrace organic living, holistic healthcare and alternative therapies.
“When Bill Moyers’ series, Healing and the Mind, premiered on PBS more than 10 years ago, the emerging field of ‘mind-body medicine’ and a range of alternative therapies from acupuncture to meditation still lay on the fringes of the U.S. healthcare system,” says Catherine Allan of Twin Cities Public Television, the show’s executive producer. “Today, the field is exploding, driven by a growing body of hard research data, as well as consumer demand, and led by pioneering doctors who understand the significance of the mind-body connection.”
The New Medicine reveals that medical education is changing. The show takes us to Drexel University College of Medicine in Philadelphia, one of a growing number of medical schools where there’s renewed emphasis on teaching some of the skills of pre-modern medicine: the importance of listening, comforting and encouraging the body’s own healing abilities. The traditional doctor-patient relationship is undergoing a shift from paternalism to partnership, as practitioners and consumers have begun to promote a more holistic form of healthcare called integrative medicine, which seeks to heal the whole person, rather than simply cure a disease.
“We as a healthcare system have kind of lost our way a little bit over the last two decades by becoming so enamored of technology and specialization that we’ve lost sight of the individual as an individual, a very complex entity,” says Dr. Ralph Snyderman, chairman emeritus of Duke University. “We ought to understand that we are engaged in healing, and healing involves caring. And caring is at the root of the practice of medicine and at the root of the physician-patient relationship.”
“Some people might feel like, ‘Well, this is kind of the touchy-feely, soft side of medicine. Why pay attention when you know what’s important in getting the x-ray and giving the antibiotic?’ ” adds Dr. Arthur Kleinman of Harvard. But this attitude is dangerously shortsighted in his view. If you’re a doctor who fails to take the time to understand an individual’s personality, history, habits and fears, “you’re practicing veterinary medicine,” he says.
Be sure to check out The New Medicine: Companion Book to the Public Television Series, with a forward by Dana Reeve. It includes in-depth interviews with physicians and research scientists featured in the program, as well as tips on how to choose the best doctor and how to get the most out of your visit.
Read More: Old Concepts, New Medicine
Tags: healthcare, Organic Living, PBS, television, The New Medicine Posted in Health | Comments Off
January 23rd, 2006 - Barbara Feiner

Dr. Mehmet Oz
TV alert for Organic Authority readers!
Debuting this week on the Discovery Health Channel is “You: The Owner’s Manual,” cohosted by nationally renowned medical experts Drs. Mehmet Oz and Michael Roizen.
The one-hour special, which premieres 8 p.m. Wednesday (EST/PST), is based on their best-selling book of the same name. It takes you on an offbeat journey through the human body, describing proven and critically important tips for restoring and maintaining your health.
With a slew of surprising factoids and a combination of animations and unique illustrations, the special provides a more complete understanding of what makes your body tick and how you can stay healthy, strengthen your body and lead a healthier life.
“Dr. Oz is the trusted source on any subject related to health, medicine and wellness,” says Eileen O’Neill, the channel’s executive vice president and general manager. “He delivers practical and life-changing information and advice in an easy-to-understand manner, and we’re thrilled to continue to have him as Discovery Health Channel’s ‘family doctor.’ ”
Watch It!
- 8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 25
- 11 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 25
- 5 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28
All times are EST/PST
Reminder
Remember to shop at your local Whole Foods Market tomorrow, when the company will donate 5% of its total global sales to the Animal Compassion Foundation.
Click here for details.
Read More: You: The Owner’s Manual
Tags: body, Health, lifestyle, television Posted in Organic, Organic Living | 6 Comments »
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