Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Supermarket Deception

!±8± Supermarket Deception

The food industry is in perfect tune with understanding the chemistry and social aspect of eating and uses it to maximize profits, while destroying the health of a nation. Just about every disease and health condition can be traced to obesity, chemicals additives and digestive overload. A natural death in America will soon be as rare as a lottery winner.

Even those individuals who attempt to rise above this deception are thwarted and deceived at every level. A prime example is the FDA requirement of full disclosure of all ingredients and nutritional value, including caloric content. On the surface, it provides a sense of security to the public that the FDA is there to protect you and has your health and wellness as its primary concern. At the same time, they allow the industry to manipulate that information in the same manner as a corner "pea under the shell" scam.

The food industry is allowed to alter the format of this information and does so in such a manner that the shopper can never expect it to be consistent and easy to find. A classic example is where the information is tucked under a flap, as often is on energy bars. The consumer than has to pull back a flap to find the content during shopping, which is a rushed chore to start with. Then the industry is allowed to list the information in a font size so small, the 40-60 year old consumer cannot read it without reading glasses or brighter lighting. This has been shown through studies. Most women shoppers will not don reading glasses in public, if they are even available at all during shopping. Supermarket design also reduces wattage of lighting to the degree that only the information the manufacturer wants you to see can be at casual glance. It is a fine tuned process designed to frustrate any consumers who dare attempt to take command of nutrition and health.

The next step is the obvious deception in serving size and calories per serving size. What should be the most important information for a consumer in determining how much to consume without over-eating is distorted the most. A good example is a breakfast cereal where the manufacturer wants you to pay more for a brand that has reduced sugar and the perception of fewer calories, thereby supporting the higher price. The normal brand may have 150 calories per serving and the serving size is one cup. A quick view of the diet product will show it has only 110 calories per serving. Most consumers stop there without realizing the serving size has been changed to ¾ of a cup. If adjusted for equivalent serving size, the content would be near equal.

Although American abandoned the attempt to convert to the metric system decades ago, nutritional information is still allowed to be presented in metric. If the product was imported from a European country where metric was the standard, this fact could be overlooked to some degree. But many American manufacturers use metric serving sizes with full knowledge that the majority of consumers have little or no idea how much that serving size really is. A casual survey among friends will illustrate this point and not many will know about 28 grams are in an ounce. The serving size itself has no bearing whatsoever as to how much a consumer could be expected to eat as a serving. Take ice cream, for instance. With a standard serving size of ½ cup, is it possible that anyone in America would ever consume just that amount at a sitting? That serving would be consumer in a mere few spoonfuls, and many would sample that amount alone from the container before actually placing scoops in a dish. In actual consumption, the majority would easily consume three to four servings and not view it as excessive. A 150 calorie per serving desert winds up being 600 calories with little recognition that it even occurred.

As an experiment, pick up cans of any product that you would assume represents a single serving to you, and read the servings per container. You will see that many list the servings per container as two. Without thought, twice the calories are ingested. One almost has to shake their head and wonder if the intent of the product was for distribution to the Munchkin population in Oz. It is a clever game and an uneven playing field for you, the consumer. Packaging, distorted nutritional information, supermarket lighting and display are just a few of the tricks to entice you into making a hasty purchase. The food industry's campaign is based on market study and shopping habits. They assume a female will be the shopper most of the time and the actual shopping is considered a chore and often a rushed chore. The average female is height is a key factor in positioning of products on the shelf with respect to reach and view. Higher priced, brand products are at eye level. Light wattage is carefully factored in to allow only the larger font size to be easily seen with clever use of print color and angling. Did you ever consider that aisle size in any market is a constant? Barely enough for two carts to pass and if you linger too long to study a label, you often hold up someone behind you seeking to pass. This forces you to act quicker when you have the perception you are inconveniencing someone else.

There you have it, just a few of the ingenious and carefully researched techniques used to entice you to spend more and care less about the actual content of the product. This result in the average food budget continuing to rise and the average American getting more and more overweight from over-consumption. A full two-thirds of Americans are now considered overweight or obese and the charade of the marketplace tops the list of contributing factors.


Supermarket Deception

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Wizard of Oz Munchkin Mayor Adult Costume (Medium - Men's Jacket Size Up To 42)

!±8± Wizard of Oz Munchkin Mayor Adult Costume (Medium - Men's Jacket Size Up To 42)

Brand : Peter Alan, Inc. | Rate : | Price :
Post Date : Dec 26, 2011 03:52:38 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days


Munchkin Mayor Costume Includes: Green tail coat w/ attached vest and bow tie, green pants and light green hat (NOTE: Mustache NOT Included).

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Wizard of Oz Munchkin Mayor Adult Costume (Medium - Men's Jacket Size Up To 42)

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Wizard of Oz Munchkin Kid Adult Costume - Medium

!±8± Wizard of Oz Munchkin Kid Adult Costume - Medium

Brand : Peter Alan Inc | Rate : | Price : $90.99
Post Date : Nov 28, 2011 17:43:07 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days


  • Medium - Fits Jacket Size 38-40

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Wizard of Oz Munchkin Kid Adult Costume - Medium

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

Top 10 Parenting Complaints

!±8± Top 10 Parenting Complaints

After 20 years as a parent educator - there's nothing I haven't heard and very little that surprises me. What interests and inspires me is how much we parents have in common with each other. And as a mom who raised 5, highly independent and self-sufficient kids and as a parent educator who has talked with hundreds of thousands of parents about life with their kids, I feel qualified to share this fun list of what I consider the "Top 10 Parenting Complaints" Enjoy.

10. Kids who push, hit, throw, kick and bite. What the heck? Don't they know what "use your words" means? Oh wait.... 9. Kids who say things like, stupid, shut up, idiot, dummy, butt-head. Yep, those would be the words. 8. Kids who can not, will not, and do not cooperate. To complicate matters, parents also expect the kids to cooperate willingly and with smiles on their faces. 7. Kids who ignore their parents. How dare those little munchkins completely ignore, walk away from, cover their ears or start to sing when we have something really, really, REALLY important to tell them again, and again, and again. 6. Kids who noodle, stall, get distracted and act like they don't have to be somewhere important. Like, yesterday. 5. Kids who think they no longer need naps. Can someone PLEASE explain to me why little kids won't sleep and teenagers will only sleep? 4. Kids who want to stay in the PJ's all day or wear the ballet costume to school for a week or refuse to wash their favorite pair of wind pants - ever. First impressions are important right? Even when they are 3 - right? After all, you never get a second chance to make a first impression - right? 3. Kids who refuse to go along with your plans and try and keep you trapped at home all day long. Come on already. Look how damn nice it is outside. Let's go, let's go, let's go! 2. Kids who yell, manhandle, annoy, bother or wake up the new baby. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We want them involved with their new sibling, but what don't they understand about - BACK OFF?? 1. Kids who refuse to eat what we put in front of them, sleep when we want them to sleep or potty train when we are ready for them to be done with the diapering. Damn kids anyway.

When you boil it all down, this is the list of the most common parenting challenges. Just for fun, for the next 24 hours, when you are considering taking one of these small annoyances and turning it into a serious problem, that needs immediate attention, instead - take a breath, look into the eyes of your beloved child and ask yourself - is it really such a big challenge? And if the answer is no, then let it go. Just this once, let it go.


Top 10 Parenting Complaints

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