Iowa
teacher takes his 'McDonald's diet' to schools, irking
critics
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[October 15, 2015]
By Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Former Iowa science
teacher John Cisna, who says he lost 60 pounds on a six-month regimen of
McDonald's food and daily walks, has sparked outrage among public health
advocates for taking his story to U.S. schools on the fast-food chain's
dime.
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The criticism comes as Steve Easterbrook, McDonald's Corp's chief
executive, fights to remake the 60-year-old chain into what he calls
a "modern, progressive burger company."
Part of that challenge is winning over youngsters who have seen
documentaries such as "Super Size Me" and "Fast Food Nation," and as
a result view McDonald's food as a contributor to obesity, diabetes
and other serious diseases.
Cisna has tried to counter that impression, first with a book last
year called "My McDonald's Diet: How I lost 37 pounds in 90 days and
became a viral media sensation," detailing an experiment he said was
created with his students. The goal was to stay within strict
calorie limits while eating items from the hamburger chain's menu.
McDonald's hired Cisna as a "brand ambassador" earlier this year and
provides him a stipend for time and travel related to his speaking
engagements, spokeswoman Lisa McComb said. She would not disclose
the size of the payments, but said Cisna came up with his experiment
without help from McDonald's.
Thus far, Cisna has spoken mostly at the invitation of about 90
schools, predominantly colleges and high schools, said McComb.
Among other things, his program includes a 20-minute documentary
"540 Meals: Choices Make the Difference" and a teachers discussion
guide, both of which were edited by McDonald's, McComb said.
"John's story is not a weight loss plan, and we do not recommend
that anyone eat every meal at one restaurant every day for an
extended period," said McComb. "While the decision on how schools
choose to educate and inform their students is up to them, we
support John's desire as a teacher to provide students with facts to
make informed choices."
Cisna was not available for comment.
Critics say the program is a new attempt by McDonald's to hook
youngsters on unhealthy food. For example, Cisna says in the video
that careful planning allowed him to eat french fries nearly every
day.
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"This is really beyond the pale in terms of its aggressive marketing
to kids," said Bettina Elias Siegel, a former lawyer, who was first
to write about Cisna's school program on her blog, TheLunchTray.com.
Mark Noltner, an Illinois elementary school teacher, called the
program "a blatant decision by McDonald's to get their name into
schools with what is basically an infomercial for the company."
McDonald's and its franchisees separately have come under fire for
sponsoring "McTeacher nights," in which teachers work at a
McDonald's serving food to students and their families, with a
portion of the evening's proceeds going back to their schools.
On Wednesday, advocacy group Corporate Accountability International,
the National Education Association and more than 50 teachers unions
held protests in Chicago and Los Angeles, and called on Easterbrook
to put a stop to brand-building school fundraisers.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Steve
Orlofsky)
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