Fed Up! 2002

Bioengineering, Agriculture

Nominated for an Environmental Media Award, this eye-opening documentary explores the United States' food production system from the organic farming of the Green Movement to the genetically engineered food of the Biotech Revolution. Through fascinating archival footage and interviews with farmers, scientists, government officials and activists, Fed Up! provides a detailed and sometimes disturbing overview of contemporary food production. About 70% of the food we eat contains genetically modified ingredients and is not labeled. The biotechnology industry is spending $50 million a year to convince us that this technology is our only hope for feeding the world and saving the environment. Family farmers are disappearing at an astonishing rate as people continue to go hungry both here and abroad. Toxic agricultural chemicals continue to poison our air, food and water and put farm workers in serious danger. What's a person to do?

Country USA
Language English
Release Date 1 January 2002
57 mins
Cast
Britt Bailey Herself - Center for Ethics and Toxics
Dominique Baron Herself - Concerned Citizen
Brent Blackwelder Himself - Friends of the Earth, USA
Beth Burroughs Herself - Executive Director, The Edmonds Institute
Ignacio Chapela Himself - Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley
Sue Markland Day Herself - President, Bay Area Bioscience Center
Katie Dwight Herself - Purisima Greens Farm
Dan Glickman Himself - US Secretary of Agriculture (voice)
Diane Joy Goodman Herself - Farm Box Project Consulting
Simon Harris Himself - Organic Consumers Association
Karen Heisler Herself - Environmental Protection Agency, Agriculture Initiative Program
Susanne L. Huttner Herself - Director, Systemwide Biotechnology Research and Education Program, University of California
Tony Juniper Himself - Friends of the Earth, England
Daphne Kingsley Herself - Live Power Community Farm, Apprentice
Nancy Evans Herself - Communications Consultant, The Bread Cancer Fund