Media

From newspapers to neighborhood blogs, all the media we are consuming and considering.

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You are what you eat.

Flickr: M.V. Jantzen

Ted's Bulletin, the Barracks Row restaurant where the shot was captured.

I love it when I learn the story behind a story– or a photograph, in this case. I read this New York Times article a few days ago, and I thought of two things, immediately. One: that picture looks familiar, like it’s from D.C. Two: I pitied the subject in it, who was shown eating chicken-fried steak plus macaroni and cheese. I remember thinking, “That’s probably her ‘splurge’ meal of the week, and they’re making her look really unhealthy in order to prove a point.” Thank you, TBD, for confirming my suspicions:

On Dec. 2 of last year, Elizabeth “Ellie” Bartels went to Ted’s Bulletin to celebrate her birthday. She ordered chicken-fried steak with applesauce and macaroni and cheese on the side. A photographer approached her and asked to take her photo for a “restaurant review,” she says. Bartels’ photo ended up running on a Dec. 7, 2010, Times article about the “many high-end junk-food purveyors that have popped up around Capitol Hill recently.”

(That article inspired one of the Washington Post’s Tim Carman’s better rants.)

Today Bartels’ photo is used under a headline few people dream of their likeness illustrating: “Government’s Dietary Advice: Eat Less.”

“I’m not terribly thrilled,” says Bartels, a government employee who lives in Adams Morgan. “I think it was just a poor choice of a pic to use.”

“It really felt like I was being shamed for having a one-off, indulgence which is something society tends to do with women,” she says.

Bartels is right. Women, minorities, poor people…no one in those groups should be treating themselves to indulgences in public. What will people think?

Tweet of the Day, 02.01

It’s “Tweet of the Day”-time, but we are doing something different tonight. This picture was sent to me via Twitter, so it still counts, but instead of embedding the tweet it arrived in, I’m going to post this image. It feels right, considering what is happening now:

Kelli Shewmaker

Taken at Georgia & W st nw, earlier today.

Tomorrow on Kojo: Organic Food

DCentric

Organic Onions at Whole Foods. Not to be confused with Organic Funyuns.

For those of you who are passionate about Organic food or examining issues like privilege, access and health– make sure you listen to tomorrow’s edition of The Kojo Nnamdi Show, which will “explore where chains like Walmart and Whole Foods fit into the healthy food movement and how their strategies compare with government efforts”.

The first hour of the show is devoted to “The Walmart Diet”; panelists include WaPo Reporter Lyndsey Layton and Corby Kummer, a Senior editor at The Atlantic.

After writing two posts about how Organic Food is often out of reach for many Americans, I’m looking forward to Kojo’s thoughtful take on the politics of buying pesticide-free food.

If you are outside of the D.C. area or you can’t tune in to hear the discussion live at Noon, look for the “Listen” link here, and enjoy it whenever.

Tweet of the Day, 01.27

Hell hath no hilarity like a DCPS parent, scorned:

Hey dcps! Pull this 2 hr delay crap on me again and I'm sending my kids in with vodka and espresso. Enough for the whole class!
@DCLikeALocal
Tim Krepp

Tweet of the Day, 01.25

Wiki defines “hashtag” as “A tag embedded in a message posted on the Twitter microblogging service, consisting of a word…prefixed with a hash sign”. In this case, “#sotu” was a way to classify tweets about last night’s State of the Union address.

Whatever you think of the #sotu, one thing is clear: we don't really talk much about poor folks anymore.
@blackink12
blackink12