New Attack Ad, and this Time it's Serious

Twerp128

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CHICAGO - A new TV commercial shows kids eating hot dogs in a school cafeteria and one little boy's haunting lament: "I was dumbfounded when the doctor told me I have late-stage colon cancer."

It's a startling revelation in an ad that vilifies one of America's most beloved, if maligned, foods, while stoking fears about a dreaded disease.

But the boy doesn't have cancer. Neither do two other kids in the ad who claim to be afflicted.

The commercial's pro-vegetarian sponsors say it's a dramatization that highlights research linking processed meats, including hot dogs, with higher odds of getting colon cancer.

But that connection is based on studies of adults, not children, and the increased risk is slight, even if you ate a hot dog a day. While compelling, it isn't conclusive.

So what exactly is the truth about hot dogs?

The 33-second ad launched last month in several U.S. cities provides the perfect opportunity to separate fact from fiction about this mysterious yet so familiar meat. It is to run in September in Chicago and Denver.

The bottom line from several nutritionists familiar with the ad is this: Hot dogs aren't exactly a "health food," but eating one every now and then probably won't hurt you.

"My concern about this campaign is it's giving the indication that the occasional hot dog in the school lunch is going to increase cancer risk," said Colleen Doyle, the American Cancer Society's nutrition director. "An occasional hot dog isn't going to increase that risk."

Americans as a whole eat hot dogs more than occasionally. According to the National Hot Dog & Sausage Council, U.S. consumers spent more than $4 billion on hot dogs and sausages last year. That includes more than 1.5 billion pounds of hot dogs and sausages bought at retail stores alone.

The health concerns primarily come from their high fat and salt content and sodium nitrate and nitrite, commonly added preservatives and color-enhancers. Nitrate-related substances have been reported to cause cancer in animals, but there's no proof they do that in people.

Hot dogs typically contain muscle meat trimmings from pork or beef. Contrary to legend, they do not contain animal eyeballs, hooves or genitals, according to the Hot Dog Council's Janet Riley. But the government does allow them to contain pig snouts and stomachs, cow lips and livers, goat gullets and lamb spleens. If they have these byproducts, the label should spell out which ones, a U.S. Department of Agriculture spokeswoman said.

Some also are made with leaner meats, including turkey, as well as tofu or soy protein.

Check the label of a name-brand hot dog, and chances are fat provides around 80 percent of total calories, more than double what's often advised. What's more, saturated fat and trans fat ? the fats most strongly linked with artery-clogging ? are common ingredients, in some cases providing at least half the fat content.

The hot dog council called the new ad an alarmist scare tactic, but the promoters, a group called The Cancer Project, defend their campaign.

Dr. Neal Barnard, president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, called the ad "a way to raise appropriate concern about a deadly concern." Barnard also heads The Cancer Project, an offshoot of his anti-meat advocacy group.

Hot dogs may be considered as American as apple pie, but Barnard said it's time to change that tradition.

"Children are born with no traditions whatsoever," he said. "You or I might think a hot dog, that just goes with baseball ... We can always change our traditions to be healthful."

The new ad is based on an analysis of five studies in adults by scientists working with cancer research groups not affiliated with Barnard's.

Their report last November said eating 50 grams a day of processed meats for several years increases colorectal cancer risk by 21 percent. That equals about one hot dog a day or two deli slices of bologna or five slices of bacon.

The duration of daily consumption linked with that higher risk is uncertain. Colorectal cancer was diagnosed between three and 19 years after the studies began, but participants could have been eating processed meats for years before that, said dietitian Karen Collins, nutrition adviser with the American Institute for Cancer Research, a group that analyzed the studies.

For a U.S. adult, eating one hot dog daily for several years would increase the average risk of getting colorectal cancer, which is 5.8 percent, to 7 percent. On a population level, it would increase the number of people nationwide who get colorectal cancer each year from 58 per 100,000 people to 70 per 100,000, Collins said.

"It's not the kind of impact on risk that, say, tobacco smoking has on lung cancer. But on the other hand, colon cancer is one of our most common cancers, so small changes still affect a lot of people," Collins said.

Eating a hot dog once or twice a month would mean up to about a 1.4 percent increased risk, she said. "The risk we get from things like lack of physical activity, excess body weight, lack of adequate vegetables and fruits, these are much more important to work on than to worry about" a 1.4 percent increased risk.

Scientists who analyzed the studies recommend avoiding processed meat ? advice that makes sense, said Lilian Cheung, of the nutrition department at Harvard's School of Public Health.

Cheung is not connected to Barnard's group, but called its campaign "a good spark plug" to improve school foods and raise awareness.

The ad is part of a campaign to improve foods in schools and get the government to stop providing processed meats. The government provides some, such as ham and processed turkey. However hot dogs, pepperoni pizza, bacon and other popular processed meats are bought from local vendors, not the federal government, according to the USDA.

Cancer Project promoters want all processed meats off school menus. They recently issued a report analyzing menus from one month last spring at 28 large school districts. Half got failing grades for serving too much processed meat.

Many school districts are working to improve their menus, including Chicago's, which is among those the Cancer Project "failed."

However, Chicago schools' hot dogs are zero-trans-fat turkey dogs, said spokesman Franklin Shuftan.

[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPaxW3BrgIY[/YOUTUBE]

And here's the douchbag
animal046p4.jpg
 
I would be more concerned about that little girl married with kids her poor vagina. Come on its a lame ad and people who believed that the kids have cancer are dumb or not listening to the narrator. I think most will ignore the ad and the pro vegan supporters are just a waste of money.
 
This is just what the United States of Hypochondriacs needs.
 
Oh, come on.. How bad can hot dogs really be.. Sure, they do contain some of the less savoury bits of the animal, they're not dangerous. People have been eating the same bits for centuries, even the Victorians considered the extraneous stuff as a delicacy.

If they were a serious health risk, the FDA would have something done about it.
 
Just stupid scare mongering.

Eat a balanced diet, (variety of foods and something from each of the main food groups) = healthy life. It could obviously include Hot Dogs no worries.
 
I don't like the taste of hot dogs very much so I almost never eat them. But this is just hilarious..... what happened to terrorisim?

hot dogs lol.
 
[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vGLHlvb8skQ[/YOUTUBE]

MEATATARIANS OF THE WORLD, UNITE!

Just once I want to see a vegetarian banquet with satisfying meat options, instead of barbeques with bullshit vegan crap. You want vegetarian options? Bring your own damn Boca Burger! :x

My apologies to Wendy's for stealing their half-assed Baconator campaign. Although, I really could go for one all of a sudden...
 
because Skeletor there looks healthy.
 
As with everything, all in moderation. Sure, if you stuff yourself full of processed meats and nothing else, you're going to have problems. The same can be said if you eat nothing but vegetables (iron deficiency, anyone?).

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vGLHlvb8skQ[/youtube]
*punches the air*

YEAH!!!
:lol:
 
I fucking hate evangelists of any form. This includes evangelizing vegetarians. Also greenpeace. Seriously, there are ways to give two shits about the environment that don't involve spreading blatant bullshit and pelting japanese whalers with rancid butter.
 
I love vegeterian food, but I'll never be one.

Seriously, are we getting to the stage where parents can't teach their kids what a balanced diet it? And instead of worrying about eating fatty foods, go do some exercise and get out there.
 
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