We know from research that stories can have a significant impact on what people know, feel and do. For better and worse, food’s pervasive depictions in entertainment like movies, television and music can be models for behavior and beliefs. How do these images of food affect us? What if storytellers chose to use their power to inspire audiences to make healthy food choices?
These questions formed the basis for new USC Annenberg research that was previewed Sept. 4 at the USA Pavilion’s Casa America (Palazzo Castiglioni) during Expo Milano 2015. The multimedia event Hollywood and Dine: The Image and Impact of Food in Entertainment centers on two studies (see Research Spotlight below) conducted by The Norman Lear Center’s Hollywood, Health & Society program. One is about the image of food on TV; the other is about the impact of different kinds of news about nutrition on audiences.
The following offer more information about or were part of the presentation at Expo Milano 2015:
- Video: Watch the full event
- Video: Watch the highlights
- Press release
- Hollywood and Dine flyer
- Information handout
- Food studies infographic booklet
- Video: Food images in cinema history
- List of films used in supercut video
- Video: Food images in American TV
- List of TV shows used in supercut video
- Listen on Spotify: Food as Entertainment—A Songbook
Special guests at the event included Norman Lear, film director and legendary writer-producer and creator of hit television shows that include All in the Family, Maude and The Jeffersons; Phil Rosenthal, creator of Everybody Loves Raymond and the new public television food and travel series I’ll Have What Phil’s Having; Sherry Yard, a renowned Los Angeles chef and James Beard Award winner; Josh Kun, music scholar, food historian and USC professor; and Marty Kaplan, screenwriter, journalist and Hollywood, Health & Society founder who previewed the new research about food in entertainment. United States Ambassador to Italy John Phillips and international cinema star Maria Grazia Cucinotta, an ambassador for Expo Milano 2015, opened the program.
This event was produced by the USA Pavilion at Expo Milano 2015, in partnership with The Norman Lear Center and the Center for Communication Leadership & Policy at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, together with The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands with the patronage of the U.S. Mission to Italy.
Research Spotlight
To learn more about the methodology and findings of the two studies:
- Rosenthal, E.L. (2015, August). The Food We See, the Food They Eat: The Image of Food In Entertainment. A report by Hollywood, Health & Society, USC Annenberg Norman Lear Center. Beverly Hills, CA.
- Rosenthal, E.L., M. Kaplan, Folb, K.L., & Rogers, A.A. (2015, August). Fake News, Real Knowledge: The Impact of Food and Nutrition Messages on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (Preliminary Research Findings). A Report by Hollywood, Health & Society, USC Annenberg Norman Lear Center: Beverly Hills, CA.
For further reading on the topic, see our list of existing research examining food, nutrition and obesity depictions on TV. More on our research and evaluation activities is available here.