"Eating MORE Junk Food Is Healthier!" | The Internet Dietician Problem

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 2 чер 2024
  • Dietitians, brought to you by The Junk Food Industry.
    Download Love & Pies here: pixly.go2cloud.org/SH3xm to join the celebration and grab your free birthday decoration! Thanks to Love & Pies for sponsoring!
    I saw this Washington Post article pop up - and I dropped EVERYTHING. I have suspected something like this for a while - not necessarily because of the dieticians themselves… but because this is what the food industry does.
    The problem with this is - the food industry’s behaviour is disturbing from a public health perspective. Point blank - Big food’s behaviour is making people sick. And Dietitians are meant to help you be healthy.
    This is a major conflict of interest. So let’s see what this article has to say.
    TIMESTAMPS:
    0:00 - Big Food Sponsors Dietitians
    1:03 - Love & Pies (Sponsor)
    2:13 - Aspartame: A Controversial Substance
    6:44 - An Old Play from Big Tobacco
    8:37 - The Food Industry & Ultra-Processed Foods
    12:22 - Pop-Tarts Will Never Be a Healthy Breakfast / All Food is Good Food
    14:38 - Eat More Sugar?
    18:01 - The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND)
    21:55 - Mind-Blowing but Predictable
    (Some) Sources:
    www.washingtonpost.com/wellne...
    www.nyu.edu/about/news-public...
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    www.cambridge.org/core/journa...
    www.ucsusa.org/resources/disi...
    ~*~
    ✉️ Send me a Video Suggestion! ✉️
    geni.us/video-suggestions
    💬 Join me on Discord! 💬
    geni.us/join-our-discord
    👀 Check out our subreddit! 👀
    / kianadocherty
    ⭐️ GET MY GUIDE! ⭐️
    How to Change: A Guide to Breaking Bad Habits and Getting Motivated
    Get it here: kdocherty.com/how-to-change-p...
    🤓 MY RECOMMENDED BOOK LIST 🤓
    geni.us/kiana-book-list
    💖 FOLLOW ME! 💖
    IG: / kianadocherty
    TikTok: / kianadocherty
    Reddit: / kianadocherty

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2 тис.

  • @KianaDocherty
    @KianaDocherty  8 місяців тому +146

    So - what do you think? Is this a hot take?
    Download Love & Pies here: pixly.go2cloud.org/SH3xm to join the celebration and grab your free birthday decoration!
    Thanks to Love & Pies for sponsoring!

    • @Antigone10
      @Antigone10 8 місяців тому +4

      Coke makes Fairlife high protein filtered milk. In fact, they make many healthy beverages. 60% of women in the US do not get their minimum daily protein requirement and should probably drink a protein shake from Coca Cola. Just saying, dieticians can absolutely partner with food companies AND do good.

    • @mstly4lg
      @mstly4lg 8 місяців тому

      Is spam okay? Dominoes pizza is just bread and cheese...is that really bad?

    • @dynamichunter843
      @dynamichunter843 8 місяців тому +7

      @@mstly4lgspam is extremely high in sodium (like dangerously if eaten every day). Pizza is not great for you but not awful in moderation. Better to make it at home though, dominoes has a lot of preservatives and super cheap ingredients.

    • @tristantries9211
      @tristantries9211 8 місяців тому +13

      @@mstly4lg none of these ultra processed foods are just the whole foods Ingredients you expect. They are all chock full of preservatives and fillers. Make a pizza at home using whole food ingredients and it won't be that bad for you because it will actually just be bread, tomatoes and cheese or whatever

    • @I_like_big_bombs
      @I_like_big_bombs 8 місяців тому +6

      Do you think that some of the fat acceptance movement might be people scammed by poor or mislead dieticians? Like when you're told so many contradictory things about food, lied to about the addictiveness of processed food, and sold fake diet products and unsustainable fads. It makes sense at least to me how someone might fail their weight loss goal, then give up.

  • @imjstar
    @imjstar 8 місяців тому +3504

    I think the doctors and dieticians should also be held responsible. They have a duty of care to patients and are deliberately spreading misinformation and muddying the waters because they were paid to do so. Honestly I think it should be illegal for health professionals to receive payment for influencing health products, food and medicine.

    • @redmaple1982
      @redmaple1982 8 місяців тому +213

      THIS! Sponsorships are a net negative, you cannot be objective if money is involved.

    • @middleofnowhere1313
      @middleofnowhere1313 8 місяців тому +110

      The Hippocratic oath: first, do no harm!

    • @pleasethedragon
      @pleasethedragon 8 місяців тому +71

      Yeah, i think these health professionals dont realize that this backlash they experience when tgese unethical sponsoships come out are not a bug, but a feature for these large corporations. Nestle, Mondelez and the whole gang don't have easily reachable public faces, so the consequences will only ever fall upon the dietitians who do have very accesible public faces. And this is by design on the industry's part.

    • @redolds231
      @redolds231 8 місяців тому

      I believe “Dr. Oz” has been sued for exactly this, or at least shilling garbage fad diets. The garbage doctor defense (personal attack, I know, but I’m angry, please forgive me) is that when he’s pushing products he’s a paid actor and not working as a doctor. Even though on everything “Dr. Oz” pushes he touts his medical background and still goes by “Dr. Oz”, the quotation marks are because I now believe that is a stage name.

    • @virginiakendziora3372
      @virginiakendziora3372 8 місяців тому +40

      Why are we not following European standards. Why is being allowed. Need to be more aggressive getting this information around to the general public. Boycotting works we have proof of that as of late.

  • @ClayMastah344
    @ClayMastah344 8 місяців тому +1804

    I had a dietitian and literally gained all the weight I lost trying to follow “healthy” tactics. They told me it was natural for my body to be obese. My counselor said the same thing due to an ED I had a decade ago. Some of these health professionals are NOT here to help you.

    • @calm_cat
      @calm_cat 8 місяців тому +191

      Ugh I’m a new therapist and the way I see therapists talk about eating disorders and totally bunk “set point” weight is SO frustrating to me! But if I disagree I’ll be told I’m “promoting fat phobia/diet culture” or something. It makes me so scared to ever work with someone who might have an eating disorder, but it also makes me scared to refer them to someone else because I fear they might have the same experience as you.

    • @misstoujoursplus
      @misstoujoursplus 8 місяців тому +80

      This goes hand in hand with the "fat acceptance" trend. But when you're getting sick because of obesity, who will help you ? I made an experiment a few months ago. I bought some kind of lemonade with aspartam. Only one hour after drinking a single glass of this stuff, I felt hungry like hell ! Usually, I'm not hungry for hours but here, it was terrible ! Aspartam is not only dangerous for ones health but it promotes obesity as well because the fake sugar triggers the body to consume the real one. Sometimes, you do not need to have huge amounts of food and beverages to get obese : wrong food choices are enough. As Kiana said, people really need to know what they are eating and drinking.
      No, being obese is not natural at all. Remember the american people in the fifties : slim and healthy, sometimes a little chubby, but that's fine, that's not obesity !

    • @OPPAWONTMARRYYOU
      @OPPAWONTMARRYYOU 8 місяців тому +56

      @@calm_cat I honesly believe in the set point weight theory but no one's set point weight is in an obese spectrum lol These ppl are nuts

    • @EmeraldAshesAudio
      @EmeraldAshesAudio 8 місяців тому +68

      @@OPPAWONTMARRYYOU Personally, I think the concept of "set point" is more like "What habits are you comfy keeping, and what weight does that land you at?"

    • @calm_cat
      @calm_cat 8 місяців тому +22

      @@OPPAWONTMARRYYOU I actually mostly agree, I worded that kinda poorly lol. Like yes generally a healthy weight is going to be different for each individual person based on things like height, fat distribution, body type, etc. So in that sense there is definitely a sort of “set point” range that I think everyone has. But you’re right, that set point is never going to be overweight/obese, lol

  • @ximar0ckstrx
    @ximar0ckstrx 8 місяців тому +809

    This is why I fired my first dietician. She pushed "eating all foods" a little to hard. I am a diabetic. I chose to cut out all sodas. She would literally push me to try to "at least try" to drink diet soda. Mind you, my sugar levels were so out of control, that I lost my vision. I regained it once I brought my sugar levels to normal again... but the fear I had of permanent blindness was real. And the entire time, she would yell at me to eat carbs and sugar. She even tried to block my WLS. I finally told her skinny a** to piss off. I felt like she was trying to keep me obese and unhealthy

    • @ellieshaw693
      @ellieshaw693 8 місяців тому +131

      dude what the hell! i'm so glad you had a mind of your own and fired her ass

    • @kpegc
      @kpegc 7 місяців тому

      How on earth someone like that can be a dietician and tell people what to eat is beyond me.
      If she had any credibility, she'd know that diet sodas are even worse for you than regular ones because they contain sweeteners like sucralose or aspartame which are basically sugar on steroids. They're dangerous because they destroy your gut bacteria and ruin your whole digestive system over the long term.
      Good on you to get away from her when you did. I hope you're doing better now.

    • @puesbien
      @puesbien 7 місяців тому +94

      Dietician probably wanted to keep you on the hamster wheel to maximize profits. It’s cyclical but idc our food is horrible in this country. We would have Medicare for all if not for all coca-cola and pop tarts and McDonald’s. Oh and cigs + alc

    • @johnnyrotten1666
      @johnnyrotten1666 7 місяців тому +13

      No she was trying to help you maintain a sustainable diet. I'm type 2 and I eat anywhere from 50-100 g of carbs. I eat a little bit of junk food and drink sugar free sodas almost everyday. I also do cardio exercise 30 min a day. My A1C is generally around 5.7.
      Doing this I've been able to keep the weight off and maintain this diet for 2+ years. Whereas before I would go hardcore cutting out all junk food trying to eat nothing but "healthy" and I could only last a few months then give in binge and gain it all back. It's ok to eat carbs and sugar as a diabetic as long as you eat the right carbs and be smart about it.
      Also there's absolutely nothing wrong with sugar free sodas. Don't listen to the fear mongering about artificial sweeteners. It's the most studied ingredient spanning over decades it's safe.
      Sugar free sodas are a godsend for diabetics like us because we get to enjoy a zero calorie zero sugar soda as much as we want and it doesn't affect blood sugar or weight.

    • @atlun1010
      @atlun1010 7 місяців тому +102

      @@johnnyrotten1666 As long as you're "skinny" and able to "maintain this diet for 2+ years" you consider that a win? YIKES... I'm glad the OP commenter fired their dietitian. You sound so copium with your amount of soda drinking, not everybody drinks sodas every day diet free or not. Some people choose to drink stuff like tea which is naturally sugar free.

  • @ShonenJoe
    @ShonenJoe 8 місяців тому +660

    I think the dietitians deserve all the heat that they're getting. Big Food already knows that they're not trusted, which is why they reach out to people who are trusted. They weren't forced into this. They did it for a bag and should reap all the consequences that comes with it.

    • @Aaron-kj8dv
      @Aaron-kj8dv 8 місяців тому +34

      Yeah they knew what they were doing and it went directly against what everyone thought they were doing. I hope they get kicked off of social media.

    • @markdotinc8371
      @markdotinc8371 8 місяців тому +26

      Agree. They profited from their unethical behavior and as such deserve consequences.

    • @godislove1602
      @godislove1602 8 місяців тому +4

      Agreed

    • @GabrielAKAFinn
      @GabrielAKAFinn 8 місяців тому +4

      The consequences of fuckall, after this becomes stale news, ie in two weeks

    • @mikekuppen6256
      @mikekuppen6256 8 місяців тому +6

      At the very least they should clearly disclose they´re being paid for their messaging. If they don´t they should get a warning and the next time lose their accreditation. Sure: the dose makes the poison but that doesn´t seem to be what they´re saying.

  • @Kazenikatze
    @Kazenikatze 8 місяців тому +1356

    I remember that in a beginning it was this 80/20 percent rule (eat 80% healthy, unprocessed food, the 20% may be "treats"), which is helpful to not see food in black/white but more reasonably preferred/less preferred, but it weirdly evolved into "all food is good" and "any restriction is inherently bad".

    • @Penguin-gq7mp
      @Penguin-gq7mp 8 місяців тому +49

      then you have the opposite which is restricting almost everything and there needs to be a good balance

    • @artisticflower
      @artisticflower 8 місяців тому +187

      Yeah, I find it strange how many people worry about ED behaviors that are too restrictive, but say nothing about ED behaviors that are too overindulgent (binge eating, poor diet, eating at inappropriate times, etc.).

    • @oliveman9065
      @oliveman9065 8 місяців тому +24

      Is there a reason for 20% specifically?
      I’m more into animal nutrition than human and for them the amount of treats is pretty universally as 10%
      I agree on that sentiment regardless

    • @defeqel6537
      @defeqel6537 8 місяців тому +16

      90/90: 90% of calories from whole foods 90% of the time, ie. a small treat every day is fine (that 10% equals about a glass of juice), and 2-3 days a month it's fine to have a bigger indulgence, like a piece (!!) of cake or pizza

    • @miaomiaou_
      @miaomiaou_ 8 місяців тому +22

      @@artisticflowerI think it boils down to audience. These dietitians have a certain irl clientele. The dietitians themselves are generally thin women, who are enthusiastic about nutrition and eat healthy diets. Their clientele is not that different from them. So they give that same advice online but online, their audience is more diverse. If a morbidly obese person walked into their office, they would likely give different advice, as telling them to continue to “eat intuitively” would be ineffective.

  • @HFC786
    @HFC786 8 місяців тому +606

    Like buying scientists and doctors to say breakfast is the most important meal of the day to sell cereal

    • @KianaDocherty
      @KianaDocherty  8 місяців тому +97

      LOL yup!

    • @me-zb7qm
      @me-zb7qm 8 місяців тому +22

      That's a lie? I learn something new every day

    • @dynamichunter843
      @dynamichunter843 8 місяців тому +86

      High protein and vitamin breakfasts are very, very good for you. Cereal and sugary crap - not so much.
      I have ADHD and don’t function without breakfast with at least 1 protein. But it goes for anyone who works a physical job or even a mental one.

    • @justine3769
      @justine3769 8 місяців тому +18

      ​@Narslimmus If you eat healthy, nutrient-dense meals, you would be satisfied with 1 or 2 meals a day max. No snacking would be needed either.

    • @danicalindsay303
      @danicalindsay303 8 місяців тому +16

      ​@@justine3769it isn't good to skip meals and there is nothing wrong with snacking

  • @lindz758
    @lindz758 8 місяців тому +705

    As a therapist who often works with people with diet issues, i dont think there's anything wrong with deeming certain foods as bad or unhealthy for us. I think the problem is when people believe "Im bad / a bad person for eating this food" which then leads to a shame / binge cycle. It would be helpful if dieticians were able to help people make this distinction.

    • @RJ-rh6cm
      @RJ-rh6cm 8 місяців тому +32

      Thank you. The nuance you've added is what seems to be missing in most of these discussions

    • @vodkalatke
      @vodkalatke 8 місяців тому +61

      This is such a great distinction! Yes, there's no bad foods "morally" but there are bad foods "physically. " I believe that many "intuitive eating" dieticians do not understand this difference.

    • @shani1928
      @shani1928 8 місяців тому +1

      Thanks. We do try to promote healthy conversation around eating and nourishing the body, but in some.cases we feel that ED dietitians woyld be a better helper than those who are not experts.

    • @m.aj11
      @m.aj11 8 місяців тому +9

      Excellent point! Especially when we take into consideration that ultraprocessed food was carefully created to be addictive, there is nothing wrong in accepting that our brains are very prone to be hooked up to the substances used in food industry. It is not our fault that we all enjoy at least some sugary or crunchy snack, however denial that these foods are bad for us is very problemtic.

    • @user-mg2qz6ep2o
      @user-mg2qz6ep2o 8 місяців тому +4

      Yes people get too emotional about it instead of being critical, I agree with that

  • @nevermindmyname813
    @nevermindmyname813 8 місяців тому +233

    I disagree. The dieticians should absolutely be taking heat. This is no different from a beauty influencer promoting a mascara that doesn't work. As an influencer, they have a responsibility to be honest with their viewers. These dieticians know that what they are saying is false, but they are taking the money and lying to their viewers on purpose. It's despicable

    • @LTDLetsPlays
      @LTDLetsPlays 8 місяців тому

      They should be fired immediately and the companies shouldn’t be allowed to pay scientists and doctors as it will breed corruption

    • @-astrangerontheinternet6687
      @-astrangerontheinternet6687 8 місяців тому +4

      Influencers only responsibility is to be likable. They owe their viewers nothing except a cute look.

    • @eyesofthecervino3366
      @eyesofthecervino3366 8 місяців тому +16

      It's no different from a beauty influencer promoting a mascara that makes you die young, haha.

    • @Kingofthenet2
      @Kingofthenet2 8 місяців тому +5

      I agree. There should take at least some responsibility. They are such a terrible influence on people with no self awareness. I don’t understand why people listen to anyone on Tik Tok

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +7

      It is WAY WAY worse than a beauty guru promoting a mascara that doesn't work. Because you won't get terminally or cronically ill from a flimsy mascara

  • @dormiebasne3578
    @dormiebasne3578 8 місяців тому +754

    This is what happens when our regulators are asleep at the wheel. Same thing with the opiate crisis.

    • @oriongemini5663
      @oriongemini5663 8 місяців тому +65

      The problem is that regulators also receive money from food industries.

    • @cjgeminitarot6836
      @cjgeminitarot6836 8 місяців тому +69

      They’re not asleep - they’re paid off.

    • @rebeccaspratling2865
      @rebeccaspratling2865 8 місяців тому +4

      Asleep at the wheel. 😂 You should do stand up.

    • @middleofnowhere1313
      @middleofnowhere1313 8 місяців тому +9

      they're getting paid off too.

    • @StarxLolita
      @StarxLolita 8 місяців тому +5

      Not asleep at the wheel, they're so old and out of touch they've had their license taken away LOL

  • @R-ABC
    @R-ABC 8 місяців тому +729

    As someone with ADHD, I CANNOT keep highly palatable foods at home because they WILL be demolished within 24hrs. It doesn't matter how much I "allow" them to try and lessen their appeal, it was never about restrict-binge cycles for me. The rush they give my impulsive, dopamine-starved brain is too irresistible
    The only thing that works for me is restricting those foods at home, and if I crave them, buying single servings when I go out so I can eat them right away (and also medication lmao)

    • @SimBits
      @SimBits 8 місяців тому +46

      I'm autistic and I tried that but I ended up just never eating because I couldn't work through the executice dysfunction to cook something for myself, my therapist then told me it's more importany that I'm eating SOMETHING than if I'm eating unhealthy. I wish there was a solution :(

    • @Hiphop618
      @Hiphop618 8 місяців тому +45

      A lot of people struggle with that, it’s not some quirky ADHD/autism thing. Stop attributing everything to that.

    • @azlizzie
      @azlizzie 8 місяців тому +43

      @@SimBitsprecut foods are fabulous. It is an easy to way to get veggies and fruits without then going bad while fighting with yourself to get them cut up and washed.

    • @funlover163
      @funlover163 8 місяців тому +95

      ​@@Hiphop618I don't think you understand.

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 8 місяців тому +11

      @@Hiphop618 Self-discipline is learned, something most people do not know.

  • @kahlanwilson6950
    @kahlanwilson6950 8 місяців тому +143

    I used to listen to the “keep the foods you want in your home so they lose their power”. It never worked for me, never. Once I stopped bringing trigger foods into my home my anxiety around food decreased and it helped me develop better impulse control. That meant for me no sugar foods and it’s made such a positive difference for me.

    • @eyesofthecervino3366
      @eyesofthecervino3366 8 місяців тому +10

      I always do better when I can have healthy snacks around and choose not to bring sugary stuff into the house once, instead of having to spend willpower choosing not to eat them every time I walk through the dining room. Unfortunately I'm living with a sister who really loves sweets and baking sweet things, and whose love language is sharing, so until I can move out my best bet is just to try to stay out of the house as much as possible T-T

    • @charmaineespeut4627
      @charmaineespeut4627 8 місяців тому +10

      I used to buy a container of mini Brownies from Kroger. I demolished them with 24-36 hrs. The power is walking past them and not buying it. That's the power.

    • @indiag89
      @indiag89 7 місяців тому +6

      I did this too! I followed these ultra thin dieticans advice and kept candy in the house because they said it’d mean I’d stop binging. Not only did it not work but I became so depressed because of it. What works better is keeping it out of the house and buying fruit and yogurt and other healthy foods I actually enjoy eating.

    • @eyesofthecervino3366
      @eyesofthecervino3366 7 місяців тому +4

      @@indiag89
      There's something so empowering about enjoying healthy food, too. So much marketing spreads the message that you have to choose between physical or mental health, that healthy things are bland and boring and unhealthy indulgences are a necessary part of self-love and self-care. There's something so validating and empowering about realizing that, no, I'm actually made to enjoy stuff that's good for me, and you guys are just a bunch of sharks trying to sell me cheap addictive junk.

    • @rachelclark6393
      @rachelclark6393 7 місяців тому +2

      ​@@eyesofthecervino3366 Do you think your sister would agree to put up and freeze some of her baked goods? Or share them with friends and family? If she loves to cook and especially loves to see other people enjoy her food, it might help to portion.
      For example, if she makes a 36 cookie recipe, cuts that into 3 and freezes 2 parts, she only makes 12 cookies. And if she puts 6 of those in a baggie for, say, her best friend, then between you two you can only eat 3 cookies each, even if you binge. I don't know if this might work, but I thought it might be a balance between making her stop cooking and making you unable to stay in the house.

  • @kristin7762
    @kristin7762 8 місяців тому +323

    Yes Kiana!!! My hot take is that Binge Eating Disorder and food addiction are WAY more common than restrictive eating disorders- and just as important to avoid. Obesity is often a result of these disorders and not the result of diet culture or restriction.

    • @chrono4998
      @chrono4998 8 місяців тому +26

      I always wondered why there were so many dieticians with that focus when it's actually niche, turns out so that they can look good while being paid by big food. there goes another shard of my innocence.

    • @selenite3890
      @selenite3890 8 місяців тому +10

      ​@@chrono4998because binge eating disorder is sometimes fueled by over restriction due to diet culture saying "cut everything out RIGHT NOW COLD TURKEY!!"

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +6

      ​@@selenite3890well you could actually stop junk food cold turkey, it's not like an alchool addiction or a benzo addiction that will kill you. As long as you are doing it out of self love and not because you feel guilty or bad about yourself. The choices you make should be driven by positive thoughts, not scared negative thoughts

    • @Voltage.Bone.R
      @Voltage.Bone.R 7 місяців тому

      Doesn’t means that it is more common, doesn’t means that it should be left aside. Though those dieticians think this shit is gonna work for everyone

  • @darbymichelle
    @darbymichelle 8 місяців тому +1120

    It feels gross. Like if at AA they tried to tell you restricting alcohol would make you more likely to binge. It truly breaks my heart for those out there struggling with food and trusting these people.

    • @Skukkix23
      @Skukkix23 8 місяців тому +109

      yeah. Hey Mike you're stressed cause you can't drink? Have a beer it's alright

    • @darbymichelle
      @darbymichelle 8 місяців тому +45

      @@Skukkix23like seriously that’s the logic 🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @amyc.peters1064
      @amyc.peters1064 8 місяців тому +17

      So gross! Like evil gross!

    • @darbymichelle
      @darbymichelle 8 місяців тому

      @@amyc.peters1064 very much so

    • @TimeQuxxn
      @TimeQuxxn 8 місяців тому +18

      That's exactly what it's like. Because food addiction is very real.

  • @me-zb7qm
    @me-zb7qm 8 місяців тому +818

    The diabetes care dietician posting that video after being paid just rendered me speechless. How could one do such a thing and sleep at night?

    • @ruminationstation4200
      @ruminationstation4200 8 місяців тому

      Diabetics are probably the one group who probably would benefit from aspartame since sugar is so detrimental on their body (at least while they work on reducing sweets)

    • @Fogwell94
      @Fogwell94 8 місяців тому +106

      By counting all the money you are getting from the food industry

    • @tazeschwifty4363
      @tazeschwifty4363 8 місяців тому +7

      ​@@Fogwell94literally what I was gonna say 😅

    • @Shalyse1
      @Shalyse1 8 місяців тому +6

      I agree. These are people's literal lives at stake!

    • @psychokitty7268
      @psychokitty7268 8 місяців тому

      The American Diabetes Association has also been bought. Hospitals use the guidelines of the ADA to feed their diabetic patients.
      When my uncle was in the hospital, his breakfast was fruit and toast. 🙄

  • @sarahp8937
    @sarahp8937 8 місяців тому +72

    A close friend has been diagnosed with BED and she sees a HAES dietician. Result.... she's just getting bigger 😭 and I was headed that way too because it is easier to blindly follow 'all food is good' advise, but this video has really refreshed me. Thank you!

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому

      "All food is good" is literally the devil wispering in your ear hoping that you get sick and die. Only the food that humans would naturally eat in nature is good, so: meat, fish, seafood, dairy, fruit, vegetables. Everything else will slowly make you malnourished and obese because it will mess up your insulin and every single other hormone in your body that regulates hunger and peace of mind.

    • @pamelapelosi5762
      @pamelapelosi5762 3 місяці тому +4

      I had the same issue. I came out of BED recovery and found a HAES dietitian; I explained what I was looking for - learning to eat healthy and balanced so I can prevent binge eating. They told me every food fits and it's ok to eat junk food; no stipulations or information on how this may affect my body. After about a year of this, I remember telling her how my A1C kept increasing and I was at a higher weight than I was before entering BED treatment. I was freaking out and wanted some information on managing blood sugar/insulin levels so I would not go into the diabetic zone. She told me to keep eating how I'm eating and that it's genetic. After 3 sessions of me telling her I don't know what to do and not getting an actionable response, I fired her and found someone who specifically tackles diabetes and has experience working with people in ED recovery. She taught me how to make a nutritious plate, how to take notice of my body when I eat sugar, or over eat, and how I feel when I exercise consistently and eat fiber-rich foods. I've since lost 30 lbs and while I still struggle with comfort and over eating, I definitely don't binge anymore.

  • @Boredblacksheep
    @Boredblacksheep 8 місяців тому +72

    Sugar is literally so addictive and the problem is that it desensitives your taste buds to other tastes. I noticed that after not eating sugar for 2 weeks. Visiting Japan was eye opening to me because all their sweets had much less sugar than in Europe. To make things obvious, I also visited US. The sweets are twice as sweet as in Europe.

    • @jodibraun6383
      @jodibraun6383 5 місяців тому +2

      In 2015 I broke a tooth that I couldn't afford to have fixed, so I stopped eating *all* sugar that wasn't fruit. I mean, I was hard-core, checking labels, diluting fruit juice etc. I lost about sixty pounds in roughly 3 months. 😮
      During the lockdowns, I reintroduced sugar, and gained almost all of that weight back.
      Watching this video pisses me off enough to cut sugar out completely again.
      Sugar is addictive. Cutting it out was extended difficult. It made me angry for the first six weeks. After that, my taste buds changed, and healthy food actually began to taste good, fruits tasted almost too sweet at times. I craved healthy food. Imagine that.

    • @pankopo
      @pankopo 4 місяці тому +1

      american sweets make my eyes hurt when i eat them, the levels of sugar are so high its insane

    • @erinpilla
      @erinpilla 7 днів тому

      I agree. I drank milk tea everyday for two years! There came a point it all felt like water. I went through a medical loss program, and really drank milk tea just once a week, small no sugar. And that was already a bargain.
      Now I can't even stand sweet drinks. I'd spit it out if the store forget to take away the sugar

  • @NCardosoIres
    @NCardosoIres 8 місяців тому +217

    It’s so crazy… the discurse makes you think that the most part of the population is anorexic when it is exactly the opposite

    • @liviumdec
      @liviumdec 8 місяців тому +19

      It's a reflection of the general demographic of dietitians. The profession has made some steps in recent years, but is still largely homogenous... and not reflective of the general population.

    • @tristantries9211
      @tristantries9211 8 місяців тому +43

      Yes I think they project their own personal issues on the world and think everyone has the same issues they do. In reality most of the first world suffers from binging and food addiction or chronic over consumption not restriction and Anna.

    • @Abby-ug4xc
      @Abby-ug4xc 7 місяців тому +1

      What I've seen is the theory that restricting your diet at is what leads to obesity in the first place- that's why they say to give into cravings, so you don't overeat later. But like Kiana says, eating UPF causes more cravings for it, for some people those cravings are unmanageable. IMO, we should ban fast food/junk food advertising, especially at children. There's no need at all to entice children to eat things harmful to their health, and normalize it to them to continue those eating habits into adulthood

    • @NCardosoIres
      @NCardosoIres 7 місяців тому +2

      @@Abby-ug4xc absolutely, I can speak for myself, I'm exactly like that... it's like a vicious cycle... if eat something with a lot of sugar it is so difficult to stop and when I only eat healthy, it is very difficult to go back to bad habits. Dietitians should teach people about how to make healthier options to deal with cravings like chosing a home made cake rather a industrialized one... but like she said they are being paid by this industries to say that so...

  • @FinalFaintasy
    @FinalFaintasy 8 місяців тому +314

    Seeing a “dietician” showing their viewers candy and junk food while telling them it’s okay to eat is the one of the shadiest things I’ve ever seen.

    • @Sarah-with-an-H
      @Sarah-with-an-H 8 місяців тому +12

      As a binge eater who’s aware and trying. There’s just some foods I can only eat in moderation if I only buy a single portion or if I have one and share the rest

    • @yawninghamster7238
      @yawninghamster7238 8 місяців тому +6

      Yup. Imagine a medical professional at a rehab center dancing around in a beer commercial, or salespeople at Rogaine shaving their heads. Now imagine a dietician pushing junk foo-oh wait...

    • @rokzane
      @rokzane 8 місяців тому +4

      The msg I am seeing is that it's perfectly fine to have a couple of fun size candy bars in your daily diet, but it's not okay to have a whole bag of them. Working fun foods into your daily calorie balance when your overall diet is pretty healthy and macro balanced is normal and fine. Telling yourself you can't have ANY candy is not fine. It's self-defeating.

    • @Sarah-with-an-H
      @Sarah-with-an-H 8 місяців тому +5

      That’s the thing even portioned out doesn’t stop a binge eater. It’s best it’s not in my pantry or fridge in the first place@@rokzane

    • @Sarah-with-an-H
      @Sarah-with-an-H 8 місяців тому

      For a binge eater it’s a type of addiction I’m literally self medicating my ADHD and moderation doesn’t exist for the hyper palatable processed foods that are by design addictive and very low nutrition @@rokzane

  • @NotACat2237
    @NotACat2237 8 місяців тому +115

    You finally said it. I'm tired of people applying the diet advice you give to somebody who has battled restrictive eating disorders to apply to everybody. People act like if you cut eating something, you will get a restrictive eating disorder. I turn to eating to make myself feel better. There is not a magic formula that says you do x you will get this mental health issue. That's not how that works.

    • @kittenillbehonest
      @kittenillbehonest 8 місяців тому +5

      this! advice given towards people recovering from restrictive eds is valid but it's not what you'd tell to everyone.

  • @danidejaneiro8378
    @danidejaneiro8378 8 місяців тому +47

    As an English teacher, I’ve conversed with thousands of students and professionals from around the world and I always ask them _“how did you get into that field?”_ Almost nobody responds with _“I’ve always been passionate about this topic”_ but rather something related to good job prospects, money, hours or just fell into it somehow. I’m sure there are plenty of dieticians like this.

    • @yanyingya
      @yanyingya 7 місяців тому +3

      It’s the sad truth about this world it’s all about money

    • @somebodyyoumayknow2280
      @somebodyyoumayknow2280 5 місяців тому

      I'm actually very interested in these topics and even considered getting a degree, but in my country dieticians just don't get paid enough 🥲

  • @evilcorgi1367
    @evilcorgi1367 8 місяців тому +369

    “People tell you to stop having hard liquor at your house if you struggle with alcohol, but that’s only going to make you want to drink more! As soon as you stop drinking every day, you’re going to want a drink EVEN MORE :O”
    Can you imagine? That’s what they’re doing with sugar. You don’t need sugar to survive, you definitely don’t need Easter candy.

    • @misstoujoursplus
      @misstoujoursplus 8 місяців тому +57

      Exactly. The less you eat sugar, the less you crave for it. The same goes with anything addictive.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +1

      These people are evil

    • @amajrae
      @amajrae 8 місяців тому +33

      I know I'll come across as pedantic here, but... slight correction: you don't need REFINED sugar to survive. Your body needs sugar (glucose) to convert into ATP during aerobic respiration to fuel your body's cells, so you do need sugar to survive... just not the refined junk, and certainly not in excess. You can easily get unrefined sugars every day eating a proper, healthy diet that includes fresh fruits, veggies and grains.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +4

      @@amajrae guess what you don't even need carbs to survive. There's people who have been on the carnivore diet for years. Humans can easily live in a constant ketogenic state. Fat is also more efficient at providing energy for the body

    • @amajrae
      @amajrae 8 місяців тому +40

      @@fran791 I knew someone would try bringing up keto or the nonsensical "carnivore" diet. First, no, these people are not eating only meat, (certainly not for years), and if they make that claim, they're lying, period. Keto, or carnivore, still uses copious amounts of butter and other dairy(butter), oils, nuts, etc.... dairy contains lactose, which is a sugar. Nuts also contain sugar in varying degrees, depending on the nut. There's no credible studies supporting long-term benefits, only questionable short-term ones. There's also the fact that an actual, pure carnivore diet would wreak havoc on your digestive system due to the lack of fiber. Humans, being omnivores, have a very long intestinal tract, and REQUIRE fiber of some kind to move waste along and keep it healthy. Obligate carnivores, such as cats, have short intestinal tracts since they don't/can't ingest plant matter. A true carnivore diet is not sustainable for a human and WILL cause problems if you stick with it, period. However, an actual keto diet, while still questionable, is very low carb, NOT no carb, and may be the only option for someone with severe IBS or crohns, depending on the person, but that's lit because their bodies can't handle most foods anyway.
      TL,DR: just eat a balanced diet of some meat, fruits and veggies since that's better for you than some fad diet.

  • @twinmama16
    @twinmama16 8 місяців тому +166

    I hate when people say, " i read this so you dont have to...trust me bro"....also I disagree that the backlash these influencers are experiencing is unfair....they are certified, trained professionals who let their greed, instead of their ethics and codes, drive their decisions. I am not saying that big food isn't to blame, but to say its unfair for these influencers, who are using their platform to possibly deceive their audience who trust them is gross.

    • @nemokys
      @nemokys 8 місяців тому +1

      then just go find the article yourself

    • @elihinze3161
      @elihinze3161 8 місяців тому +6

      Agreed completely

    • @emerylee3330
      @emerylee3330 8 місяців тому +5

      you can still read the article lol shes been very thorough to cite direct quotes and acknowledge the spectrum of opinions. doesnt feel like a trust me bro situation.
      also i took her comment about clinicians completely differently, shes not saying they should get off scott free, but i think we can all observe that the majority of our energy is more effective when spent on the direct source of the issue.

    • @DistortedRainbows
      @DistortedRainbows 8 місяців тому +21

      This person is talking about one of the TikTok dieticians who said that she read the WHO report so her audience doesn't have to. They're not talking about Kiana.

    • @DistortedRainbows
      @DistortedRainbows 8 місяців тому +5

      3:27

  • @miaomiaou_
    @miaomiaou_ 8 місяців тому +37

    I’m really wary of these social media dieticians. I’ve seen so many of them preaching how intuitive eating is for everyone, like they don’t have an extensive knowledge of nutrition, and that anyone can just pick it up in their 6 week online course. “Intuitive eating” becomes a mystical destination, when all it really seems to mean is: I have counted my calories/macros for so long that I have an intrinsic sense of how much food to eat to maintain my thinness forever, basically.

  • @sierrasnode
    @sierrasnode 8 місяців тому +36

    That clip about the Easter candy made me cringe, because I used to believe that. I followed advice from online dietitians that if I just allowed myself to have enough of my cravings, I would eventually stop craving it and be able to eat more balanced. Trouble is, I have ADHD. My brain goes crazy on the dopamine that sugary and processed food creates. I was never satisfied, and I gained 55 lbs. Now that I’ve actually set up some boundaries for myself, I find I have WAY more control around food and sweets. Also down 20 lbs so far 🎉

    • @LowBMIVoice
      @LowBMIVoice 18 днів тому

      Same, girl!!!
      Also, keep up the great work!!! 💪

  • @AuralayKristine
    @AuralayKristine 8 місяців тому +220

    I've cut way back on processed foods and added sugars and it's incredible how different I feel. My insane constant hunger is gone, for one! I've finally broken the weight loss plateau I've been stuck on for 8 months, for another. I've now lost 147 pounds! But the more I learn about the food industry, and the practices within it, the more I'm baffled half this stuff is even legal.

    • @wuzittooya
      @wuzittooya 8 місяців тому +10

      Congrats on the progress you've achieved! 🎉

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 8 місяців тому +1

      Have you readjusted your TDEE to account for your lost weight? At some point those negative calories turn into maintenance calories the more you lose.

    • @AuralayKristine
      @AuralayKristine 8 місяців тому +9

      @@lainiwakura1776 Yeah I had, but not far enough apparently. The issue was my appetite was so strong I couldn't keep my calories low enough to get off maintenance because I was still eating too much. I'd been aiming for 1800 calories a day, but landing closer to 2000 just from the excessive hunger. Once I cut out added sugars, I've been landing very naturally between 1300-1500, and losing weight again.

    • @ellieshaw693
      @ellieshaw693 8 місяців тому +1

      that is awesome 🎉🎉🎉

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому

      That means that those foods were making you insulin resistant. They were literally creating glitches in your body lol. That's why junk food makes us sick

  • @cadenandthegirl
    @cadenandthegirl 8 місяців тому +470

    I’m a recovering anorexic, and I really appreciate what you said about having a healthy relationship with food. The healthiest diet is one where you treat your body with respect, and that means eating healthy food most of the time and indulging cravings here and there. Completely avoiding certain food groups because you’re afraid of them isn’t healthy, just like indulging those cravings on a daily basis isn’t healthy. It’s all about balance.

    • @Angel_Billy4-30-23
      @Angel_Billy4-30-23 8 місяців тому +19

      God bless you and I pray for your continued success in recovery. I am a recovering heroin/opiate addict (2 and a half years clean) and I see so many parallels between drug addiction and food addiction or almost any other addiction too. I just wish that food addiction had almost the same taboo as drug addiction because you might have a lot less of these food companies trying to convince us that very unhealthy and extremely processed foods are healthy.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +4

      You are right but we also need to remember that junk food is not a food group and sugar is not a food group. Our bodies are not made to digest those things. Then of course you can have a piece of homemade cake or a cookie once a week and it won't kill you or mess up your insulin.
      I think the solution to heal a disordered mindset is to focus on what our bodies love most, so: fruit, meat, fish, our ancestral foods that we ate all day before obesity ever existed

    • @postiveelectron8879
      @postiveelectron8879 4 місяці тому +2

      ​@@fran791saying this to a recovering anorexic is not the move . We can digest sugar and most junk food and we can metabolize them as well, as she said, everything in moderation.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 4 місяці тому

      @@postiveelectron8879 thinking about what foods are the most nutritious for humans is what helped me with my ED. I eat the things with the most nutrients: fatty meat, fish, dairy, fruits and a couple veggies and rice and pasta or potatoes if I need some carbs as filler

  • @drewalexanderwest8501
    @drewalexanderwest8501 8 місяців тому +113

    Abby sharpe fully messed up my relationship with food and i am 50 pounds heavier than i was before i watched her content and really embodied it. I am experiencing actaul health issues because of it. I may have had anxiety around food, but listening to her made it worse AND im unhealthier because of it. Now i have to unlearn all of those habits. As a frequent binge eater, my "diet culture" habits were saving me from obesity aka what i have now.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +16

      I KNEW IT, I knew she was harming people. Thank you for sharing this. I will tell you what helped me heal my relationship with food: the books by sally fallon and the weston price foundation blog. They focus on what ancient cultures ate and what hunter gatherer tribes eat. Those diets are our actual natural human diets and they are so good for our body. The books are "noirishing fats", "nourishing diets", "nourishing traditions". Also read the book by dr elizabeth bright and watch the videos by nutrition with judy. They have a science based approach and they go against the carb heavy guidelines that make everyone fat

    • @indiag89
      @indiag89 7 місяців тому

      Yeah and she’s skinny. She’s giving people advice she doesn’t follow at all. She’s a crappy person and probably rich because of it now.

    • @boop79
      @boop79 6 місяців тому

      She is a mess!!

    • @lisataylor3027
      @lisataylor3027 5 місяців тому +3

      I don’t like Abby either she is very harmful

    • @nataliazart
      @nataliazart 3 місяці тому +1

      I'm so sorry for you. I tend to watch her videos but I never do what she says. One no necessary tip, what help me was watching a video about how french eat. No matters what I hope you find the right way for you.

  • @bruh666
    @bruh666 8 місяців тому +13

    I find it bizarre that the Federal trade Comission "advises social media influencers to be clear about who is paying them for promotions", like.. advises? How is that not legally mandatory? A doctor can go online and say "coca cola is actually not bad for you" while stating they are a certified medical doctor and they don't legally have to disclosed that they were payed to say that? Genuinly dystopian

  • @Lilas.Duveteux
    @Lilas.Duveteux 8 місяців тому +345

    My mom once tried artificial sweetners, but quitted them after learning about the risk and replaced with real sugar, simply consuming less sugary things.
    I learned to appreciate the taste of unsweetened tea, which does help with sugar consumption.

    • @blue_578
      @blue_578 8 місяців тому +43

      I will now consume double the amount of artificial sweeteners just to make up for your Mom

    • @twinmama16
      @twinmama16 8 місяців тому +6

      Liquid stevia drops actually make unsweetened tea tasty! Just make sure its the drops not the powdery kind.

    • @unturned6066
      @unturned6066 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@blue_578I do both, artificial sweetener in my soda-streamer and no sugar in my tea ✨

    • @FreePigeon
      @FreePigeon 8 місяців тому +14

      Same, I switched back to real sugar and just consume less. I feel a lot better for it surprisingly.

    • @jessip8654
      @jessip8654 8 місяців тому

      @@blue_578 I mean, you do you. All people are asking for is to be informed on the possible harm these products cause without Big Food muddying the waters with their propaganda.

  • @GoldSkye
    @GoldSkye 8 місяців тому +70

    I’ve suspected a lot of the food IG pages for this. A ton of them do side by side comparisons of food options and frequently suggest that all calories are created equally so an avocado toast compared to a Krispie crème donut is the same thing if the calorie count matches up. As if sugar addiction and glucose spiking and crashing, gut health, lack of nutrition aren’t issues.

    • @rebeccaspratling2865
      @rebeccaspratling2865 8 місяців тому +6

      Uhmurican things. 🙌

    • @tristantries9211
      @tristantries9211 8 місяців тому +11

      Right like at least avocado toast has some nutrients and will help fill you up. A crispie creme donut feels like eating air and you can eat like 4 at a time (if your teeth don't hurt) and your stomach doesn't really feel like it ate anything

  • @hopek4505
    @hopek4505 8 місяців тому +64

    Newly registered dietitian here: I agree with what you are saying--in fact, we had guest lecturers from the dairy & meat industry speaking in our courses. I'm Canadian and when the new food guide was introduced in 2019, so many people were upset! That's because the new food guide is based on scientific research THAT IS NOT FUNDED by food companies or food industries. So, now the food guide encourages plant-based proteins, fibre, whole foods, and making water your drink of choice.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +15

      Plant based doesn't equal healthy tho, most vegeterians are malnourished unless they consume big quantities of cheese, milk and eggs. There is a big chunk of the population that inevitably becomes diabetic if they have to rely on carbs as their main energy sourve. The healthiest human diet is animal based. You should read the studies that demonstrate that human health, especially bone and dental health declined a lot after the agricultural revolution

    • @raedaze
      @raedaze 7 місяців тому

      @@fran791lmfao. You’re hilarious. After not eating milk, eggs or cheese for 5+ years, i have not once been malnourished. Yearly blood tests are great. Yet for some reason.. everyone else I know that consumes a crap ton of those foods is way worse off health wise. There is plenty of scientific evidence to back that a diverse plant based diet is just as healthy for all age groups.
      You seem like a bot that is pushing keto/carnivore rhetoric.

    • @raedaze
      @raedaze 7 місяців тому +9

      Vegetarians or plant based people do not solely rely on carbs either. There is plenty of plant based protein and fat. All macronutrients are important.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 7 місяців тому +12

      @@raedaze you do realize that "vegetable proteins" like legumes are still mainly carbs right?

    • @jeffrey7063
      @jeffrey7063 6 місяців тому

      Plant based proteins are terrible and not bio available. Worst is most of them are inflammatory.

  • @MrFragalax
    @MrFragalax 8 місяців тому +28

    One of those influencers mentioned how we need to address "the affordability of fruits and vegetables". I know this varies by region, but in my experience fruits and vegetables are not that expensive. You can buy 6-7 bananas for $2 or even less sometimes. Meat on the other hand, especially organic meat, can definitely hit you in the wallet.

    • @JP-ve7or
      @JP-ve7or 8 місяців тому +5

      True! Also, canned and frozen vegetables aren't too expensive, and they keep. Buying fruit in season is the best. I got a ton of raspberries, blackberries, and cherries this year just by waiting and watching for big sales. I might be fortunate, though, that I don't live in a "food desert" where fresh produce is unavailable.

    • @ellieshaw693
      @ellieshaw693 8 місяців тому

      yeah i felt like she was just straight up lying to us that fruit and vegetables aren't already affordable

    • @mariah5714
      @mariah5714 8 місяців тому +4

      ​@ellieshaw693 they're not too affordable where I live unfortunately. A small bundle of grapes is like 8 bucks for example

    • @ellieshaw693
      @ellieshaw693 8 місяців тому +1

      @@mariah5714 wow that's wild!! i stand corrected

    • @mariah5714
      @mariah5714 8 місяців тому +2

      @ellieshaw693 others are more affordable though. Bundle of bananas is still like 3 or 4 bucks, 2 kilos of potatoes is like 5, but apples are like 2 bucks apiece. Lol

  • @kaleido9631
    @kaleido9631 8 місяців тому +159

    Gosh, what a complex topic. Now that I am good at intuitive eating, I've actually realized I don't even like all the crappy quality candy that is promoted around holidays. I eat candy, but I eat *good* candy. Like high quality. But also, I don't have like candy bowls around my house because I can't deal with that either. There is so much nuance to the process of recovering from the binge restrict cycle - and it's about balance.

    • @KianaDocherty
      @KianaDocherty  8 місяців тому +36

      man this comment lol🔥 i resonate so much. exact same.

    • @thecatherd
      @thecatherd 8 місяців тому +8

      I feel you, I really feel you. A lot of fixing my relationship with food has been finding that balance and nuance that stops me from slipping back into the binge restrict cycle. It can be really difficult to find that balance.

    • @lucietigger1641
      @lucietigger1641 8 місяців тому +14

      Agree with you completely. Intuitive eating (dare I say it, proper intuitive eating, not the 'eat junk cos you want it' thing it's being corrupted into) really helped me recover a restrictive ED bugging me for 30 years. I'm like you, I will eat sweet foods, although I don't really have a sweet tooth, but only decent quality things preferably small producers/home baked stuff. BUT I still won't have sweet foods in any quantity in my house as I do still have occasional urges to binge, I can most of the time talk myself out of it and identify my emotions.... But if I have sweet foods on easy access it's almost impossible to do.

    • @mmmmmmmmaria
      @mmmmmmmmaria 8 місяців тому +8

      i have the exact same experience. i’ll never stop loving HIGH quality pastries and baked goods so i try to only let myself have them occasionally. baking something nice a couple times a month and sharing with my work friends so that i only get to have one portion has been very nice. but if there’s something like random crackers around i WILL graze on them until they’re gone so i don’t keep that in the house

    • @oliveman9065
      @oliveman9065 8 місяців тому +6

      Right.
      When I was young I remember loving all the name brand candies. But now they all taste powdery and flavorless. It’s allll sugar and milk.
      sometimes I crave them, go to take a few bites and am sorely disappointed each time 😂
      Even though I already know what it’s gonna be like.

  • @elizabethduffy2145
    @elizabethduffy2145 8 місяців тому +187

    Interestingly, Pre-war and Wartime Betty Crocker was more about how to make food from scratch, how to be economical and how to spread rations as far as possible. Even as an advertising entity, she had earned trust. Turning her to the dark side meant it brought along a lot of that initial trust for her huge radio audience of the era.

    • @StarxLolita
      @StarxLolita 8 місяців тому +10

      We definitely watched the same Betty Crocker youtube doc.

    • @manicpepsicola3431
      @manicpepsicola3431 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@StarxLolita what is the documentary thst sounds super interesting

    • @chelseaoates610
      @chelseaoates610 8 місяців тому

      Would like to know what that documentary is as well

    • @StarxLolita
      @StarxLolita 8 місяців тому +7

      I'm pretty sure it was How To Cook That's "The $10 Million dollar lie"

    • @spideratari
      @spideratari 8 місяців тому

      Excellent insight!

  • @XxEmmJayxX
    @XxEmmJayxX 8 місяців тому +85

    I’m in school to become a Registered Dietitian. Unfortunately, we learn that we cannot use the words “good” or “bad” when describing foods to prevent eating disorders. Also, cravings do get worse when we tell ourselves that we “can’t” have something. It’s better to tell ourselves “I choose not to eat this.” But I do think that INFLUENCER Dietitians are focusing wayyyy to much on eating disorders instead of physical health.
    In my opinion, we need to focus on raising children to have healthy eating habits, not force them to eat everything on their plate when they aren’t hungry, and to provide whole meals with vegetables early in their development. Unfortunately, most people that can afford or have time to eat whole foods work less and get paid more. We are just so deep into the issues caused by capitalism and the food industry that it’s really difficult to tell people to stop eating what they like.
    I am also incredibly disappointed in these RDs who allow themselves to sell out. I’m glad you made this video Kiana!

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +13

      I never understood why americans have this idea that healthy food takes a long time to make. That's a false and harmful belief. You literally just need to slap a couple sausages, burgers or steaks on a pan and you need to cook rice and cut some veggies

    • @daonedaonly942
      @daonedaonly942 4 місяці тому +1

      ​@@fran791that IS a lot of work for overworked and underpaid Americans.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 4 місяці тому

      @@daonedaonly942 you can do that in literally half an hour, same time it takes to go to a drive through, and a fraction of the time that the average american spends on tiktok

    • @chickensalad3535
      @chickensalad3535 3 місяці тому

      @@fran791I cook healthy, and I admit that it’s a lot of work.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 3 місяці тому

      @@chickensalad3535 what do you usually cook?

  • @phoelixphoelix9696
    @phoelixphoelix9696 2 місяці тому +2

    I remember using the „restriction is bad“ and „all food is good“ claims as excuses for me giving in to my cravings. Regretting it instantly after overeating and feeling guilty for days afterwards, while the cravings grew stronger.

  • @karaleigh_eva
    @karaleigh_eva 8 місяців тому +123

    This is so depressing. Definitely the kick in the ass I needed to continue making my own food even when I don't feel like cooking

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому

      Making food is easy bruh

  • @quartknee22
    @quartknee22 8 місяців тому +202

    Artificial sugars make me violently ill - all of them. And the amount of people who have criticized me, called me a liar and promoting "diet culture" has made me question my own reality so many times. Sugar addiction is real and I'm furious to hear that dieticians are paid off by Big Food. I always knew these insta/tik tok dieticians were suspicious....

    • @ruminationstation4200
      @ruminationstation4200 8 місяців тому +37

      Artificial sugars are a huge part of diet culture since most are low/no calorie. Preferring real sugar is literally the opposite of diet culture. I swear some people just throw out words these days with no sense about their meaning

    • @quartknee22
      @quartknee22 8 місяців тому +25

      @ruminationstation4200 anything that criticizes food is "diet culture" is what I'm coming to understand

    • @cautiousgalaxy4613
      @cautiousgalaxy4613 8 місяців тому +14

      They give me the worst headaches. since I was a teen I haven't been able to drink diet sodas

    • @shimmershine6902
      @shimmershine6902 8 місяців тому +19

      I’m the opposite. Full sugar drinks make me feel so “sticky” and makes my teeth feel like they’re dissolving. Usually if I have to I dilute pop with sparkling water and I dilute juice with water. Sugar free drinks honestly taste much better to me 💀

    • @kbird6208
      @kbird6208 8 місяців тому +5

      Artificial sugars make me sick too. Especially the old school ones. And they all taste so wrong to me. It's frustrating how hard it is to find lower sugar versions of things without stevia. If we just put less sugar in things then we wouldn't need all the stevia.

  • @miricori
    @miricori 8 місяців тому +18

    The Food Industry is such a ruthless "organization", I'm finding myself getting a bit worried about Kiana. Hoping she won't ever have to deal with any issues due to "poking the bear". Thank you for another very much needed educational video! ❤As a junk food addict, there definitely is "bad food" for me. It's the shit that makes me binge, depressed and lose complete control of my life. Not allowing any of it into my house, anymore. And no, that doesn't make me crave it more. The longer I abstain from it, the better for my mental state. No more obsession over it. Truly freeing. Ultra-processed food doesn't even deserve the description "food", in my book. It's devoid of nutrients and it's harmful. Real food gives us life. 💚

    • @JP-ve7or
      @JP-ve7or 8 місяців тому +2

      Honestly, I was also sitting here wondering if Kiana's going to get backlash. Are we paranoid or is this reality? 🤔

    • @miricori
      @miricori 8 місяців тому

      @@JP-ve7or Looking at how politicians in Mexico & Chile literally got personally threatened by the industry when trying to tax soda & other junk food more, I don’t think we’re paranoid. Lots of power & money on the other side..

  • @jassy0903
    @jassy0903 7 місяців тому +4

    I'm a nutrition student in training to become a registered dietitian. In one of our required culinary classes, a lobbying group gave a presentation on the health benefits of beef and how it doesn't actually contribute to climate change, cows are really happy etc obviously all lies. The RD that works for the beef lobbying group, basically told us people are going to eat what they want to eat so don't bother telling them otherwise. Like, what? I've also met RDs that work for the dairy counsel, egg counsel, and pork board. Is it unethical? Absolutely.

  • @CheerfulNihilism
    @CheerfulNihilism 8 місяців тому +143

    I was getting my PhD in Health education in 2016, and I was invited to present my dissertation research at FNCE - The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics hosts the annual conference, but it's sponsored by pepsico, Nabisco, etc. I declined to present. I left the discipline because it was so depressing to realize that lots of nutrition research is literally funded by the food industry.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому

      That's why I don't trust blog posts and nutitionists that say that seed oils are healthy. You will never convince me that an industrial product that humans would have never eaten in nature is healthy. You give artificial food to any animal and they get sick and die, why would it be different eith humans

    • @BotDetector-44
      @BotDetector-44 7 місяців тому +3

      Source: trust me bro, I have a PhD

    • @CheerfulNihilism
      @CheerfulNihilism 7 місяців тому +9

      @@BotDetector-44 I actually don't have a PhD. I dropped out because I ran out of money and was getting a divorce.

    • @cWjkL8ysxOkrH66
      @cWjkL8ysxOkrH66 7 місяців тому +7

      @@BotDetector-44 can you read?

    • @cashmoneychanel1209
      @cashmoneychanel1209 7 місяців тому +1

      @@CheerfulNihilismgo back babe!!!

  • @nicosiadelaisla
    @nicosiadelaisla 8 місяців тому +318

    I think the villainization of “Almond moms” or “crunchiness” is somehow related. Obviously, extremes on any side are unhealthy- but it seems to me that you are critiqued more for eliminating ultra-processed foods from your diet than for eating them in excess. That’s my perception of ig dieticians anyways 😂.

    • @SimBits
      @SimBits 8 місяців тому +50

      Eh I don't really feel like they're related since most crunchy mom slander comes from kids who grew up getting EDs from their parents restricting them, not dietitians who shill junk food products

    • @Waryfaerie
      @Waryfaerie 8 місяців тому

      Heavy disagree. Almond moms aren’t just healthy women, the whole thing is that they damage their children’s perception of their own body and food. Almond moms cause insecurity and ED in their children. That’s what an almond mom is, not just a health parent

    • @nicosiadelaisla
      @nicosiadelaisla 8 місяців тому +9

      There is a niche of videos that go beyond that though. Balance is essential, it doesn’t have to be a restrictive ED OR junk centric diet.

    • @miaomiaou_
      @miaomiaou_ 8 місяців тому +45

      @@SimBitsI think it’s more of a reaction to the villianization tbh. These new dietitians have to prove they’re not like those other kale chip-loving, crystal light-huffing dietitians. So they’ll make a polarizing video saying a cookie and an avocado are the same bc they have the same amount of calories. This get them more views too.

    • @LTDLetsPlays
      @LTDLetsPlays 8 місяців тому +21

      Crunch supremacist here
      Crunchiness is better than any other texture in existence and it will remain as such those who question it will be referred as sinners

  • @somrigost
    @somrigost 8 місяців тому +18

    Thank you for this video! The food industry just seems to dodge all the blame for the obesity epidemic. It's not something that can be solved without adressing what they do.

  • @Ellis-Tor
    @Ellis-Tor 8 місяців тому +6

    im so glad you are talking about this, thanks you for covering these topics fairly... for years i did what "registered dieticians" told me to do and it wasnt until i took matters into my own hands and started following "unapproved" approach to food that my health improved dramatically and i lost a ton of weight

  • @ninar7040
    @ninar7040 8 місяців тому +43

    your dog napping curled up like a doughnut in the back 🥺 the aesthetics of the lovely armchair and warm lighting make him look even cozier and more adorable!
    edit: his ears popped up!! my heart

  • @flameguy3416
    @flameguy3416 8 місяців тому +88

    The food industry has gotten its talons into every institute or association that's involved with health. It first really started when Procter & Gamble gave the A.H.A. 1.7 million dollars in the 1910s. The A.H.A. then unsurprisingly began advertising for the use of P&G's new product 'Crisco', a hydrogenated cottonseed oil over the traditionally used animal fats and started to vilify animal fats for their saturated fat content. This is speculative but the time frames really fit.

    • @directAction3389
      @directAction3389 8 місяців тому

      Trans fats are indeed INFINITELY worse. It legit took damn near a century to get the FDA to remove trans fats from the their GRAS (generally recognized as safe) list. Turns out fat isn't really the bad guy. Trans fats are. Highly processed food is so bad because it's just devoid of any real nutrients and straight up designed to make people crave more as they eat themselves to death very slowly.

    • @annwilliams6438
      @annwilliams6438 8 місяців тому

      Have a look at The Physicians Committee and Dr Micheal Greger for groups that look specifically at nutrition across the board and which are NOT funded by ‘big food’.

    • @lulupomegranate
      @lulupomegranate 8 місяців тому +2

      They
      they criticized animal fat
      for having fat?!
      IT'S FAT

    • @yawninghamster7238
      @yawninghamster7238 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@@lulupomegranateyou're so right, yet they were still successful with their smear campaign. It's like every day we live in the Opposite Day episode of SpongeBob.

  • @SlXkxmx
    @SlXkxmx 8 місяців тому +7

    As someone who cut sugar out of their diet, for a year or two, the only time I craved sugar was the first week or so. After that, I had no desire for it.

    • @gothicc_gremlin
      @gothicc_gremlin 3 місяці тому

      Same, I stopped drinking sugar in my coffee, and ever since then I don't even desire to eat candy anymore, which is something I always did, always thought I had a massive sweet tooth.
      Turns out that wasn't the case

  • @callarose9432
    @callarose9432 2 місяці тому +1

    Right now I'm in my "restrict" cycle of my ED and now I wonder when my binge will come. I've gotten to the point where I'm scared to eat. I avoid going out with friends. My niece's birthday party will be at our favorite Japanese restaurant and I'm dreading it.

  • @QUEERVEEART
    @QUEERVEEART 8 місяців тому +45

    i know there are bad foods. i have sensory and nausea issues and sometimes have to eat anything i can. i dont shame myself for eating bad food but i dont lie to myself about the lack of health benefits either. i think its a useful skill i have

  • @xXGracieGhostXx
    @xXGracieGhostXx 8 місяців тому +74

    I literally watched an Abbey Sharp video that was talking about the myths about potatoes being healthy that was literally sponsored by a french fry company! Like, there is nothing wrong about potatoes if prepared in a healthy way, but I have been taught that the most trustworthy studies/sources of information to use are the ones that are non-biased, and having a video about how potatoes are healthy sponsored by a french fry brand seems just a bit biased to me, but idk...

    • @vodkalatke
      @vodkalatke 8 місяців тому +13

      It was the Canadian Sugar Lobby who was funding Canadian dieticians...I literally feel like she's just defending her friends lol

    • @Gizelle-cs6ix
      @Gizelle-cs6ix 8 місяців тому +14

      I was scrolling looking for a comment that mentioned her lol.

    • @mhmtakeyatime9000
      @mhmtakeyatime9000 8 місяців тому +23

      Of course Abby Sharpe is sponsored by a big food company! I always had the feeling..

    • @erinmeadows14
      @erinmeadows14 8 місяців тому +11

      ⁠@@mhmtakeyatime9000I am a long time subscriber of hers (though more of a lurker now) and I am pretty sure I recall her have a dairy industry sponsorship years ago.
      Edit this to add: I just watched her video on this article. She does talk about some of her past industry partnerships (ones she regrets, videos removed, etc) and current industry partnerships (dairy included). It was a pretty good video tbh.

    • @jubilibw2366
      @jubilibw2366 3 місяці тому +1

      Potatoes are very healthy

  • @fearlesssfcappuccino
    @fearlesssfcappuccino 8 місяців тому

    Once again, SO grateful for your presence on this platform and the well-researched videos!! THANK YOU for continuing to speak up on these issues like this and call out the problematic stuff!!

  • @anastasiacoral6812
    @anastasiacoral6812 8 місяців тому +3

    I love all of your videos. You are always so eloquent and informative. I love how you addressed the “all food is good food” can be helpful for small groups of people that suffer with EDs, but not for the majority. It honestly frightens me how much we are surrounded by food that is barely food, with little to no nutritious value. You’ve opened up a discussion for a really important topic here and I hope this gets debated a lot more pushing our governments and healthcare systems to hopefully make some amendments.

  • @ginameza3312
    @ginameza3312 8 місяців тому +88

    I'm a dietitian and i absolutely hated when my teachers at uni teached us that "there is no bad foods", i personally never believed that BS, i mean we are literally watching people die from bad diets...
    I love your videos Kiana!! i watch your videos for inspiration to write my thesis.
    love from mx

    • @nope19568
      @nope19568 3 місяці тому +1

      bad diet isnt bad food tho, dose makes the poison, if you get a burger every year on your birthday and no other day youre probably not really gonna feel any effects from that at all, but if you eat burgers for lunch and dinner everyday because its easier to get then yeah thats gonna be a problem, the burger never changed tho

  • @marysenum5621
    @marysenum5621 8 місяців тому +84

    When she explained the one cookie thing being either a singular great experience or an accidental trigger to all plans out the window and you’re now gonna binge? I wish I wasn’t the latter..

    • @james6028
      @james6028 8 місяців тому +3

      ive never related to anything so hard lol

    • @kbird6208
      @kbird6208 8 місяців тому +6

      I'm definitely better off with no treat than just one treat.

    • @marysenum5621
      @marysenum5621 8 місяців тому +1

      @@kbird6208 I would definitely say I’m the exact same way

  • @la-ov5zw
    @la-ov5zw 8 місяців тому +1

    Kiana, you are literally the only whose videos i NEVER miss despite your topics not even being things im passionate about in the first place ! i love your dedication to the message you share, this counter lobbying is really inspiring. never stop uploading those videos, you're part of a movement to make this world a better place and i love it

  • @leonaheraty3760
    @leonaheraty3760 8 місяців тому +2

    Wow! This is so eye-opening and disturbing about the food industry and some unethical dieticians! Good grief! What's this world coming to? 😳🤔
    Thank you so much for sharing this information, Kiana! You are the voice of reason. Keep up the excellent work! 😊

  • @annastone9748
    @annastone9748 8 місяців тому +38

    I wonder if the prevalence of ED history among dietitians is part of why so many of them seem to focus more on the “no bad foods” message.
    There is a section of the population that does need to hear that message, but it’s not the majority.

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +8

      I feel like people who used to have eating disorders becoming dieticians is just another way for them to obsess on what they eat

  • @flameguy3416
    @flameguy3416 8 місяців тому +48

    The food industry also creates fat acceptance campaigns unsurprisingly.

  • @andreana24
    @andreana24 8 місяців тому

    please don’t ever stop positing, kiana! i’ve been subbed and watching you for soo long and have always been at awe at your presenting and delivery of information. thank you for your hard work, much love from chicago!

  • @crabgal
    @crabgal 8 місяців тому +4

    I’m writing a research paper for my comm class about influencer advertising, and I’m so glad this video popped up for me. It’s a phenomenon I’ve noticed too, and something I mention specifically in my topic paragraph. Food advertising is downright predatory, especially combined with social media

  • @anak6707
    @anak6707 8 місяців тому +48

    As much as your videos are always very interesting and the quality of your videos is top notch, I can't help but to let my focus shift on your sweet little dog, sleeping without any care in the world. So cute 🥰
    Keep up with the amazing work Kiana☺

    • @NO1knowsy333
      @NO1knowsy333 8 місяців тому +6

      Such a sweet bean 🥰 I love her non judgemental science based approach to such sensitive topics. And the pup is a most comforting presence.

    • @rachel1362
      @rachel1362 8 місяців тому +6

      Omg I was just thinking this!! She was so cute finding her perfect napping position lol

  • @nataliecaldwell9228
    @nataliecaldwell9228 8 місяців тому +77

    Your videos are just brilliant! Thank you for the time you put into them, they have seriously helped me take back control of my binge eating

    • @KianaDocherty
      @KianaDocherty  8 місяців тому +13

      thats so epic, thank you very much and congratulations!! 💪💪

    • @nataliecaldwell9228
      @nataliecaldwell9228 8 місяців тому +1

      @@KianaDocherty Tysm! 🥰

  • @bryanaward4417
    @bryanaward4417 8 місяців тому

    Kiana, this video came at the perfect time for me. I struggle with binge eating, and I am actively finding my healthy balance with food and exercise. I get lots of whispers in my mind about eating from these brands, because I have some "indulgences" I partake in from them. But this video was a great reminder to view these brands' products as a step backward, and to instead focus on my real goals of cooking my food and occasional indulgences at home.
    Thank you for being a voice of truth in a sea of misinformation and self-gratification.

  • @masha22092000r
    @masha22092000r 8 місяців тому +1

    The amount of research you do for your videos is astonishing!
    Thanks for another great watch.

  • @patataeve
    @patataeve 8 місяців тому +24

    This is one of your most urgent videos, with very important info. It shouldn't be a hot take, it's common sense!!! Thank you Kiana!!!!

  • @missraincanyon
    @missraincanyon 8 місяців тому +134

    I see a Kiana video notification, I always instantly click

  • @KillerMZE
    @KillerMZE 8 місяців тому +6

    "possibly carcinogenic" means there is little to no actual scientific evidence. After that comes "probably carcinogenic", which is when there are some studies, and "carcinogenic" when there's enough data to prove it

    • @ZephyrinSkies
      @ZephyrinSkies 8 місяців тому

      I'd still be suspicious of possibly carcinogenic. Research is funded by food companies that actively try to downplay negativity to sell product. Lack of evidence could also be from lack of incentive to find it.

  • @cherryblossomed
    @cherryblossomed 8 місяців тому +1

    I just wanted to say thank you. Your videos are so informative and so awesome. They're also super truthful and real. Which is lacking in this world. Looking at your comment section, clearly you've helped so many people!!! Thank you! And early Congrats on 500k subs!!!!! 😍🥳

  • @Lilas.Duveteux
    @Lilas.Duveteux 8 місяців тому +17

    Also, part of big food industry, is to try and overide the disgust reflex of individuals. Like, when I worked at a convenience store, the smell of the fizzy drinks. The station needs at least a few cleanings per shift, and it's only possible if the store is fully staffed. Not every establishment would have the necessary staff to keep this part of the store clean and safe. Not to mention, when the buttons are over-used, they can create safety hazard for both customer and employees since the overuse can lead to gas leaks and monoxyde issues. And that is not even talking about the production chain and the dodgy practices that can occure there. With the slushies...Just the smell of the powders. I wonder how can anyone stomach it, because I found the smell of them absolutely nauseating in all it's sickly sweet glory. The powder is so fine, you can breath it, and is actually more repulsive to me than cleaning the toilets.
    Also, all food is good food kind of depends on the situation. If someone for example, does outdoors work in Antartica, than yes, chocolate bars and deep fried sweets would be quite a healthy food because of the high amounts of calories necessary to stave off hypothermia. And yes, despite needing high calories, it's preferable if those high calories don't contain cancerogenes and have more nutrition to them than plain calories. It doesn't mean it's a healthy food for Bob who works an office job. Many individuals, including the Russian news, would recommand homemade broths as a drinkable snack to deal with low temperatures as opposed to sweets. Broth are highly bioavailable and nutricious, containing fat, proteine and collagen, all of which are good when dealing with cold tempertures.
    Another thing, is that many eating disorders have a high coomorbidity with chronic pain, either because they were prescribed diets when they took pain killers (some of them do cause weight gain) and would continue eating as if they are still on medication, have this pain because of the damage over eating or under eating had caused their body or because the chronic pain either made them unable to properly digest food due to stress or if they started overeating as a way to cope with the pain, gustative pleasure allowing to take a break from it. That beign said, I don't think advertising hard-to-digest ultra-processed food to someone who already have digestion-related issues to be a very ethical marketing strategy. Like, someone who have to think, before starting each meal: "will this thing make me puke ?", and then market things to those people that would surely upset a fragilized stomach would probably create a negative feed-back loop. So, helping with restrictive eating disorder yes, but up to a point, as they are extremely rare, although it can be a factor. Creating positive association with food would probably help. 52% of individuals with an eating disorder have a history of trauma, often characterized by exessive eating.

  • @rachaelnugent
    @rachaelnugent 8 місяців тому +18

    Ok, I've been in hospitals with Burger King franchises INSIDE the actual facility.
    Compared to that, a diabetes specialist saying you're better of with Diet Coke than regular Coke, I actually have no problem

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +2

      Only in the usa you will se horrendous things like that

  • @julia_btfl
    @julia_btfl 8 місяців тому

    This is my favourite video from your channel since it gives an insight into this rising trend in the health and dieting community about considering every type of food as healthy, which is a problem I don't think many people are warping their minds around and reflecting on it.
    Keep up the good work Kiana 😊

  • @Seevawonderloaf
    @Seevawonderloaf 8 місяців тому +4

    Thank you for covering this! These people are ruining the name of their own industry. It is the SAME reason why there is an all time low trust in institutions be it the CDC or WHO. This is a public health issue and is a major problem. Reminds me of when the cigarette industry had a decade long PR campaign against those who claimed that cigs cause cancer (which they do obv) using scientists. Edit: I wrote this before I heard the part where you commented on this. This is great!!

  • @jerbearpumacop
    @jerbearpumacop 8 місяців тому +3

    Thank you so much for bringing attention to this problem. I work with guys who drink ungodly amounts of sugar before lunch time and it’s so sad people aren’t even aware of it.
    Keep doing what you’re doing❤

  • @avatar_korrasami
    @avatar_korrasami 8 місяців тому +13

    I like the “no good or bad foods” thing because it helps me to avoid dichotomous thinking. I found this very helpful, as I used to slip up and then give up on my diet for the day and binge. Whereas now I don’t view foods as good or bad and so long as I keep my protein high and my calories within a deficit I eat what I want

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому +1

      Instead of thinking about "there are no bad foods" you should think: foods are on a specrum of best to worst.
      Fish, meat, animal fats, fruits and vegetables are the best, then comes everything else that will make you gradually more malnourished because they are not nutrient dense like rice, pasta, bread and then junk food

    • @avatar_korrasami
      @avatar_korrasami 8 місяців тому +1

      @@fran791 I don’t even do that. Because sometimes I will eat something that would definitely go in the “worst category” but it’s the best thing for me to include it in my diet even though it’s not the optimal choice. Psychologically I need treats in my diet to stick to it. I have lost 35kg no surgery so what I’m doing working for me :)

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому

      @@avatar_korrasami yea that's good, the most important part is that the main things you eat are the most nutritious because your body needs that, especially animal proteins and fats which are essential for hormone balance

  • @audralong6067
    @audralong6067 8 місяців тому

    Thank you for acknowledging that some advice could be helpful while also pointing out the conflict of interest. Well rounded perspective 👍🏻

  • @janebrown7231
    @janebrown7231 8 місяців тому +35

    My brother-in-law progressively became...crazy. His mood swings were horrific, he was completely irrational, he was on the edge of being diagnosed psychotic, he got fired for abusing customers, my two nieces became frightened of him, he was close to being divorced.
    Physically, he felt just slightly ill all the time. Headachy, a bit hyper, tired muscles... just non-specifically unwell. He couldn't see how he was behaving.
    On a long shot, my sister got him to suspend his rising aspartame habit.
    Instantly, he was improving, and within a few days he seemed nearly his normal self.
    And he was only a moderate aspartame user.
    ASPARTAME TOXICITY IS A THING.
    And he is certainly not the only sufferer who didn't believe it was possible and resisted breaking his obsessive habit.
    Check out aspartame toxicity for other cases.

    • @aurora3861
      @aurora3861 8 місяців тому +8

      true i recently had a sip of diet coke 😎 Next thing i know is i wake up in the hospital. 😨
      my roommate later told me that i entered a state of psychosis and jumped from the balcony 💀💀💀
      Now im only allowed to drink water with a sprinkle of salt 😢😥😭

    • @yawninghamster7238
      @yawninghamster7238 8 місяців тому +4

      ​@@aurora3861​if Equate isn't paying you for comments like this, why bother?

    • @fran791
      @fran791 8 місяців тому

      Bitch the NEUROLOGICAL TOXICITY

    • @serberus5233
      @serberus5233 7 місяців тому +1

      I had aspartame once and now I'm dead.

    • @janebrown7231
      @janebrown7231 7 місяців тому +1

      @serberus5233 Did you then eat a bag of sugar and come back to life? If so, I'm going to do the same.

  • @notlistening89
    @notlistening89 8 місяців тому +34

    So from my understanding, WHO classifying aspartame to possibly causing cancer is a bit clickbait'y though. Or media outlets made their findings into clickbait. So basically you need to drink ridiculous amounts of diet soda per day for it to cause cancer. Like hundreds of cans.
    Obviously dieticians shouldn't get paid by coke to say that coke zero is good for you. But aspartame isn't as bad as just reading headlines made it out to be.

    • @thecatherd
      @thecatherd 8 місяців тому

      In fairness that's the fault of news outlets grabbing for headlines. I think WHO's statement is fair.

    • @spreadyourwingsandflybutte768
      @spreadyourwingsandflybutte768 8 місяців тому +3

      Exactly. The risk of cancer is for folks that drink over 12 cans a day!! 1-2 a day won’t kill you

    • @caligvla3786
      @caligvla3786 8 місяців тому +5

      It’s 9-14 cans (assuming a can has 200-300mg of aspartame) per day for a person weighing 70kgs assuming no other aspartame products are consumed along side it. Safe limits should not exceed 40mg per kg of body weight. Most people won’t exceed it, but it’s definitely possible if you’re eating “diet” foods and smashing no sugar drinks.
      It’s admitted that there still isn’t enough research into the product. That makes me weary. Although it breaks down into fairly basic and common compounds in your body, there may still be questions about addiction, endocrine function, etc.

    • @JP-ve7or
      @JP-ve7or 8 місяців тому

      Honestly, that sounds sensible. I have no idea what the real truth is on aspartame, but a few years ago I figured, why consume it? I don't need it. I used to drink diet soda all the time and now that I'm not used to it anymore, it tastes so, so gross to me. I don't miss it at all.

  • @liviumdec
    @liviumdec 8 місяців тому +3

    Great coverage of a tragically ongoing issue. I really admire your work - you have a wonderful delivery style, you're objective, and you're not afraid to call bullshit. (FYI: Marion pronounces it Nestle like nestled inside something, not like Nestle the Swiss company!)

  • @helen.faunway
    @helen.faunway 8 місяців тому +3

    Before I got properly medicated for my ADHD, I used to NEVER cook for myself: exclusively lived off shitty microwave meals, lunchmeat sandwiches, and grubhub. For the last month and a half, though, I've been avoiding processed, greasy, high sugar content, fast food, junk, and soda; also started easing up on my consumption of empty carbs, and am now cooking almost every meal or getting freshly made stuff at a nearby deli. And wow I really do feel such a huge difference: it was clear that my prior eating choices were genuinely making my mental illness, chronic fatigue, and brain fog 10x worse. There really needs to be more widespread education about how toxic convenience food is, and it's so gross that the people who are supposed to be responsible for doing that are doing the opposite.

  • @QuantumMindfuck
    @QuantumMindfuck 8 місяців тому +7

    @Kiana - I know it's not your usual wheelhouse, but as you're a dog owner, I'd love to see you research and make a video on the pet food industry and your thoughts on processing in pet food. It's SO controversial and heated

  • @ramalabanieh5078
    @ramalabanieh5078 8 місяців тому +5

    As a junior in highschool who is planning on becoming a dietician, this is revolting.

  • @ElinWinblad
    @ElinWinblad 8 місяців тому +1

    Doesn’t surprise me, pharma teams up with doctors to get them to submit more subscriptions and get a cut. Just like judges /state get a cut of child support checks and the renewal fees x number of ppl paying is insane per state. Where does that money go?

  • @QuantumMindfuck
    @QuantumMindfuck 8 місяців тому +3

    I appreciate your integrity in this, Kiana! I'm always trying to eat less processed food (and feed my family less processed foods), it's definitely a challenge in the food climate we live in in North America.

  • @steelfalconx2000
    @steelfalconx2000 8 місяців тому +11

    Layne Norton did a great analysis of the aspartame situation, and yeah there's not really a reason to panic. But the deeper issue is the bribing of the influencers.

  • @qualifiedarmchaircritic
    @qualifiedarmchaircritic 8 місяців тому +3

    13:22 that is such a good point, Kiana. I think part of the issue here is that many of the people who 1) become dieticians, and 2) go on social media both often come from a background of eating disorder and thus see "no food is inherently bad" as the most important message (because that was what THEY needed to learn, not what the general population needs to learn) and because this message is what their typically young and insecure audience wants to hear (it's comfortable, doesn't get you to change habits, it seems wholesome, etc).

  • @devdawg22
    @devdawg22 8 місяців тому +2

    The FDA is this on a large scale. The FDA "regulates" who funds it. You can't regulate who pays you

  • @jonhillman871
    @jonhillman871 8 місяців тому +5

    this is kiara's best video. i was aware that the junk food industry wielded a lot of power and influence but i didn't realize they had taken so much control of the narrative coming from nutritionists. i really liked the graphics of the "tobacco playbook." i take health, fitness, and nutrition very seriously so for me this is the most important thing i've learned in a long time.

  • @Oonagh72
    @Oonagh72 8 місяців тому +12

    I wonder if this new wave fat acceptance was funded by “big sugar”. Even though grass roots efforts do a lot they usually can’t go far without a big boost of money.

  • @spideratari
    @spideratari 8 місяців тому +1

    Thank you so much for doing the research and presenting all this super important information in such an easy to understand way. Your videos are always entertaining and informative. Also, your dog is adorable.

  • @samanthaanderson4023
    @samanthaanderson4023 8 місяців тому

    Thank you for you videos. I've watched them for quite awhile and now am able to use your sources to aid in my research report! I really appreciate what you're doing.

  • @edityourlife1970
    @edityourlife1970 8 місяців тому +14

    I can't help but blame HAES-"informed" care being taught in dietian programs.

  • @katherine3
    @katherine3 8 місяців тому +3

    Great video! I also loved the Aspertame video! You at 17:30: "Dieticians who maybe struggled with the opposite problem can't relate to those of us who have problems with overeating" "they don't realize this message could be harmful to some people" YES TO THIS OH MY GOD. My dietician from last year told me she struggled with a restrictive eating disorder and it pushed her to become a dietician, but then 'helped' me gain 20 pounds in 2 months, going from 230lbs to 250lbs... she did not understand my needs and my inability to be intuitive, to know portion sizes, or my hunger cues. She just didn't understand the concept of overeating at all.

  • @jinaolen786
    @jinaolen786 8 місяців тому

    *fangirling* I hoped you would do a video on this the moment i started reading the article!

  • @char_lizard8440
    @char_lizard8440 7 місяців тому +3

    I'm not a dietitian but I know that in order for aspartame to be dangerous you would have to drink like 20 cans of soda a day and like a hundred packets of aspartame a day in order for it to have its full effect on being destructive to your body.

    • @gothamarea
      @gothamarea 7 місяців тому

      That’s what I thought but this UA-camr never mentioned that

  • @user-ld5tq2wr1d
    @user-ld5tq2wr1d 8 місяців тому +6

    The dog really enjoy the issue you brought 🤣

  • @gdonut9902
    @gdonut9902 8 місяців тому +5

    Thank you! For years now everywhere I look it’s like seeing people drink the koolaid lol literally and that seems to be the only message from most health creators that the first rule is to eat bad food and celebrate eating something our bodies don’t need.

  • @wge621
    @wge621 8 місяців тому +2

    THANK YOU for bringing this up. Love your balanced perspective

  • @Junitunes
    @Junitunes 7 місяців тому +1

    I’ve noticed this about dieticians in general. One told me my problems would be fixed by eating whole wheat . I told them I have ibs and chronic pain which bread makes worse. She wouldn’t listen and kept telling me I was wrong

  • @ChlorineHeart
    @ChlorineHeart 3 місяці тому +3

    Yeah seeing dietitions like abbey sharp go in on wellness influencers and never on major brands like coca cola is very suspect to me.