Hungry Planet: What the World Eats

I found this all very much by accident. A friend forwarded me an email that contained photographs of families with a week’s supply of groceries. She no doubt thought that i would find this book and ‘photographic essay‘ interesting from a photographic and creative point of view—and I do. But more interesting to me, is what these families eat over the period of a week and just how incredibly different their diets are.

This family from the North Carolina seems to have spent half of their weekly budget on fast food. The photo features prominently their pizzas, soft drinks and snack foods and I suspect this isn’t too far from the ‘average’ American’s diet, where convenience and fast food are common. It also shows how much it costs to pay for the convenience of fast food. 

Compare this to say the photo of the family from Ecuador and the contrasts are startling. It seems obvious that as a nation we are spending more money on food that is less healthy than the food our “third world” neighbors are eating. Are we deluding ourselves when we think that America is the greatest and most advanced country in the world? Look at the photos; you be the judge.


Posted at 12pm on 05/14/2008 | Filed Under: MediaPhotography

American Limbo

This morning on my drive into the office, as has become my habit, I listened to “This American Life.“ This particular episode was “American Limbo” and tells the story of the Jarvis family from West Virginia.

The story begins with the Jarvis family living off the land and off-the-grid in West Virginia on 140 acres of land. The parents are children of the sixties, minimalists and raising their children to be the same. The middle of the story occurs right across the peninsula from where I was living in West River, MD—at the same time the Jarvis family was living “on the hard” (as boat folk like to say) at Backyard Boats in Shadyside, MD. This family was literally rock-throwing distance from where my office was located at Parish Creek Marina. The candid actualities with the parents and children provide some amazing insight into how their family survived and the effect it had on all of them. This may be the best individual ‘act’ I have listened to on This American Life:

Act One. The Family That Flees Together, Trees Together. The Jarvis family, a group of eight, goes on the run from the law — for seven years. They live on a boat, in a treehouse in a swamp. They escape capture time after time. And how do the kids turn out, living a life outside of society, as fugitives? Surprisingly great. (22 minutes)


Posted at 8am on 05/08/2008 | Filed Under: CultureMedia

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