Michael Moss
Michael Moss
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Full Name and Common Aliases
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Michael Moss is a renowned American investigative journalist, author, and professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. His full name is Michael George Moss.
Birth and Death Dates
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Michael Moss was born on December 21, 1959, in Chicago, Illinois. As of this writing, he is still alive.
Nationality and Profession(s)
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Moss is an American journalist, author, and professor. He has worked extensively as a reporter for The New York Times and has written several bestselling books on investigative journalism.
Early Life and Background
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Michael Moss grew up in Chicago, Illinois. His family moved to the suburbs of Chicago when he was young. Moss developed an interest in writing at an early age and began working as a freelance journalist while still in high school.
Moss attended Michigan State University, where he studied journalism and graduated with honors. After college, he worked as a reporter for several small newspapers before joining The New York Times in 1998.
Major Accomplishments
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Michael Moss has made significant contributions to investigative journalism through his work at The New York Times. Some of his notable achievements include:
Exposing the food industry's practice of adding sodium to processed meats, which led to increased health risks for consumers.
Investigating the role of industrial agriculture in contributing to antibiotic resistance.
Uncovering the secret life of bees and their importance in global food production.
Notable Works or Actions
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Michael Moss has written several books on investigative journalism, including:
"Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us" (2013)
"The Price of Mercy: A Memoir" (2006)
"Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber" (2020)
Impact and Legacy
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Michael Moss's work has had a significant impact on public health, consumer awareness, and corporate accountability. His investigative reporting has led to changes in food labeling laws, increased scrutiny of the meat industry, and raised awareness about the importance of bees in global food production.
Why They Are Widely Quoted or Remembered
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Michael Moss is widely quoted and remembered for his groundbreaking investigative journalism, which has exposed dark secrets in the food industry and beyond. His work has been recognized with numerous awards, including the Pulitzer Prize.
Quotes by Michael Moss

Many of the Prego sauces – whether cheesy, chunky, or light – have one feature in common: The largest ingredient, after tomatoes, is sugar. A mere half cup of Prego Traditional, for instance, has more than two teaspoons of sugar, as much as two-plus Oreo cookies, a tube of Go-Gurt, or some of the Pepperidge Farm Apple Turnovers that Campbell also makes.

If you mapped categories of food advertising, especially advertising to kids, against the Food Guide Pyramid, it would turn the pyramid on its head,” he.

Some of the largest companies are now using brain scans to study how we react neurologically to certain foods, especially to sugar. They’ve discovered that the brain lights up for sugar the same way it does for cocaine.

The notion that some foods behave like narcotics goes back at least twenty years in scientific circles.

When consumers tried to improve their health by shifting to skim milk, Congress set up a scheme for the powerful dairy industry through which it has quietly turned all that unwanted, surplus fat into huge sales of cheese – not cheese to be eaten before or after dinner as a delicacy, but cheese that is slipped into our food as an alluring but unnecessary extra ingredient. The toll, thirty years later: The average American now consumes as much as thirty-three pounds of cheese a year.

If sugar is the methamphetamine of processed food ingredients, with its high-speed, blunt assault on our brains, then fat is the opiate, a smooth operator whose effects are less obvious but no less powerful. A.

Well, that’s what the consumer wants, and we’re not putting a gun to their head to eat it. That’s what they want. If we give them less, they’ll buy less, and the competitor will get our market. So you’re sort of trapped.

The growing attention Americans are paying to what they put into their mouths has touched off a new scramble by the processed-food companies to address health concerns.

They may have salt, sugar, and fat on their side, but we, ultimately, have the power to make choices. After all, we decide what to buy. We decide how much to eat.

What I found, over four years of research and reporting, was a conscious effort — taking place in labs and marketing meetings and grocery-store aisles — to get people hooked on foods that are convenient and inexpensive.