Junk food

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Cheetos are commonly considered a junk food partially because it is prepared in industrial kitchens and packaged.
The Luther Burger, a bacon cheeseburger which employs a glazed donut in place of each bun, is considered a junk food partially due to the high sugar and fat content.

Junk food is an informal term applied to some foods which are perceived to have little or no nutritional value, or to products with nutritional value but which also have ingredients considered unhealthy when regularly eaten, or to those considered unhealthy to consume at all. The term was coined by Michael Jacobson, director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, in 1972.[1]

Foods more likely to be considered junk food generally are those that are more convenient and easy to obtain in a ready-to-eat form, though being such does not automatically define the food as "junk food."

[edit] Marketing

During 2006, in the United Kingdom, following a high profile media campaign by the chef Jamie Oliver and a threat of court action from the National Heart Forum[2], the UK advertising regulator and competition authority, Ofcom, launched a consultation on advertising of foods to children.[3] The Food Standards Agency was one of many respondents.[4] As a result, a ban on advertising during children's television programmes and programmes aimed at school aged children (5-16) was announced.[5] The ban also includes marketing using celebrities, cartoon characters and health or nutrition claims.

Many teenage girls, already the most poorly nourished of any group in America, have stopped drinking milk or eating meat in their extreme fear of fat.

—Frances Berg, MS, Women Afraid to Eat

Eating disorders have increased five-fold among children 8-13, one clinic noting that one child as young as five developing anorexia.[6] According to NHANES III, two-thirds of teenage girls who are trying to eat "healthy" by avoiding junk foods are deficient in iron, calcium and other important nutrients.[7]

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