3.5 

Chew on This

By Charles Wilson & Eric Schlosser
Chew on This by Charles Wilson & Eric Schlosser digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

Kids love fast food. And the fast food industry definitely loves kids. It couldn’t survive without them. Did you know that the biggest toy company in the world is McDonald’s? It’s true. In fact, one out of every three toys given to a child in the United States each year is from a fast food restaurant.

Not only has fast food reached into the toy industry, it’s moving into our schools. One out of every five public schools in the United States now serves brand name fast food. But do kids know what they’re eating? Where do fast food hamburgers come from? And what makes those fries taste so good?

When Eric Schlosser’s best-selling book, Fast Food Nation, was published for adults in 2001, many called for his groundbreaking insight to be shared with young people. Now Schlosser, along with co-writer Charles Wilson, has investigated the subject further, uncovering new facts children need to know.

In Chew On This, they share with kids the fascinating and sometimes frightening truth about what lurks between those sesame seed buns, what a chicken ‘nugget’ really is, and how the fast food industry has been feeding off children for generations.


What really goes on behind the counter, in the factories, and in the corporate boardrooms?


  • The Secret of the Fries: Discover why McDonald’s fries taste so good—and the surprising ingredient that kept vegetarians in the dark for years.
  • The Youngster Business: Learn the tactics used to turn children into lifelong customers, from Happy Meal toys to commercials designed to make you nag your parents.
  • From Farm to Factory: An unflinching look at where hamburgers and chicken nuggets really come from, and the hidden costs to animals, workers, and the environment.
  • McSchools: See how cafeterias are turning into fast-food courts and what it means for students’ health when soda and junk food are sold on campus.

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Chew on This Reviews

3.5
“Here’s a knuckle sandwich called McReality with a side of consuming capitalism as stated: “Chew on this: people should know what lies beneath the shiny, happy surface of every fast-food restaurant. They should know what really lurks between those sesame seed buns. As the old saying goes: you are what you eat.” (xvii) We’re given the origins of many famous fast-food restaurants, the business practices they used to reach such successes and external other factors, the sources of their food and the efforts they did to make sure the foods were delicious and addictive through their advertisements and target audience of children. The book goes far enough to call the ‘experiments’ and research done on the children basically brainwashing. There was a small blurb about a worker, Daneille, high schooler, that worked 19 hours straight and was given a bag of candy as a ‘thank you’ and another blurb about McUnions—a system where the bottom rung was mistreated sparked some emotion out of me. Another blurb was during the investigation about the conditions for slaughterhouses of chickens and cows. How one work would step on the necks since they enjoyed the sound it made, pretty bizarre to hear. Hearing about natives and other people entering the world of obesity, losing teeth and other health issues due to the heavy advertisement and successes of fast food was rough. Although people have personal responsibility about what they eat, when fast food advertisements are everywhere—the imprint of it will stay in the person’s brain. The reality does feel a bit grim, big-wig corporations having such financial success to even sway Congress from politicians to the politics. On the flip side it does end on a hopeful note, with people making changes in their own way such as choosing to not eat fast food, make their own food and overall other healthier alternatives. At the end are Questions for young readers to develop critical thinking and digest what they read, footnotes, bibliography and index. A great read. Recommend to anyone and everyone.”

About Charles Wilson

Charles Wilson grew up in West Virginia and has written for several newspapers and magazines, including the New York Times and the Washington Post. He has worked on the staff of The New Yorker and the New York Times Magazine and has rounded up beef cattle on horseback at his uncle’s ranch.

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