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Super Size Me Was Not Groundbreaking Journalism

13 20
25.05.2024

Media Criticism

Billy Binion | 5.24.2024 5:30 PM

Morgan Spurlock, the documentarian whose film Super Size Me attempted to expose the perils of fast food as it followed him adhering to a monthlong McDonald's-only diet, has died from complications of cancer. He was 53.

Spurlock went on to make several other films. But nothing would eclipse the hype around Super Size Me, which catapulted him to fame and attracted an Academy Award nomination for best documentary feature. If you're a millennial like me, there's a chance the movie, which was released in 2004, was a part of your education diet, whether in high school or college, touted as an example of groundbreaking investigative reporting. The problem is that it wasn't.

The movie tracks a 32-year-old Spurlock from February 1 to March 2 of 2003 as he ate McDonald's for breakfast, lunch, and dinner each day, with no exceptions. The name of the film comes from the chain's erstwhile supersize option, which Spurlock........

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