American Dish

American Dish

Meet the billionaire trying to clean up the food supply: Todd Wagner.

1 h 0 min · Ayer
portada del episodio Meet the billionaire trying to clean up the food supply: Todd Wagner.

Descripción

Todd Wagner, a tech billionaire and Hollywood mogul best known for co-founding Broadcast.com with Mark Cuban, isn’t particularly well known in food world — but he’s increasingly having a big impact. Wagner first got interested in American food policy after noticing his migraines would all but disappear when he traveled to Europe. He did some research and realized that the U.S. was letting thousands of food additives onto the market without regulatory oversight. In 2023, Wagner and film producer Lori McCreary launched FoodFight USA, a non-partisan non-profit aimed at cleaning up the U.S. food supply. Since then, Wagner and his team have played an integral role in passing historic state food additive bans and are also pressing Washington to revamp food additive oversight nationwide. In this conversation, Wagner shares some behind-the-scenes details from meeting with California Gov. Gavin Newsom and HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. He sees the fight against ultra-processed foods as similar to the fight against Big Tobacco: long, messy, and ultimately winnable. Highlights: – The inside story of urging Governor Newsom to sign the California Food Safety Act – What GRAS actually is, why Wagner calls it the linchpin of America's food crisis, and why no other country has an equivalent – The fight over New York's GRAS disclosure bill and what it would actually require of food companies – Why Wagner thinks the Big Tobacco playbook maps almost perfectly onto ultra-processed foods – Using AI to triage tens of thousands of food chemicals for post-market safety review – Front-of-pack labeling, the black octagon, and why warning labels matter even if they can't fix everything – The "real cost" of a can of Coke: subsidies, SNAP, downstream healthcare, and margin-stacking against smaller, healthier brands Where to find Todd Wagner: Food Fight USA [https://foodfightusa.com/] Food Fight USA on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/foodfight_usa/] Food Fight USA on X [https://x.com/food_fight_usa] Mentioned in this episode: California Food Safety Act [https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202320240AB418] New York Food Safety and Chemical Disclosure Act [https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/bills/2025/A1556/amendment/F] Yuka food scanning app [https://yuka.io/en/] Ultra-Processed People [https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/451300/ultra-processed-people-by-tulleken-chris-van/9781529160222] by Chris van Tulleken [https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/451300/ultra-processed-people-by-tulleken-chris-van/9781529160222] Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1016268/] (documentary) [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1016268/] Stay in touch: Sign up for Helena’s must-read weekly newsletter: Food Fix [https://foodfix.co/]. Follow American Dish on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/americandishpodcast/] and YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@AmericanDishPodcast]. Send ideas and feedback to info@foodfix.co [info@foodfix.co] Check out Forked [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/forked-presented-by-reap-sow/id1821950125], the food politics podcast Helena co-hosts with the Food & Environment Reporting Network. Credits: This episode was edited by Adrienne Cruz [https://adriennecruz.com/]. Original music by David Bottemiller.

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11 episodios

episode Meet the billionaire trying to clean up the food supply: Todd Wagner. artwork

Meet the billionaire trying to clean up the food supply: Todd Wagner.

Todd Wagner, a tech billionaire and Hollywood mogul best known for co-founding Broadcast.com with Mark Cuban, isn’t particularly well known in food world — but he’s increasingly having a big impact. Wagner first got interested in American food policy after noticing his migraines would all but disappear when he traveled to Europe. He did some research and realized that the U.S. was letting thousands of food additives onto the market without regulatory oversight. In 2023, Wagner and film producer Lori McCreary launched FoodFight USA, a non-partisan non-profit aimed at cleaning up the U.S. food supply. Since then, Wagner and his team have played an integral role in passing historic state food additive bans and are also pressing Washington to revamp food additive oversight nationwide. In this conversation, Wagner shares some behind-the-scenes details from meeting with California Gov. Gavin Newsom and HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. He sees the fight against ultra-processed foods as similar to the fight against Big Tobacco: long, messy, and ultimately winnable. Highlights: – The inside story of urging Governor Newsom to sign the California Food Safety Act – What GRAS actually is, why Wagner calls it the linchpin of America's food crisis, and why no other country has an equivalent – The fight over New York's GRAS disclosure bill and what it would actually require of food companies – Why Wagner thinks the Big Tobacco playbook maps almost perfectly onto ultra-processed foods – Using AI to triage tens of thousands of food chemicals for post-market safety review – Front-of-pack labeling, the black octagon, and why warning labels matter even if they can't fix everything – The "real cost" of a can of Coke: subsidies, SNAP, downstream healthcare, and margin-stacking against smaller, healthier brands Where to find Todd Wagner: Food Fight USA [https://foodfightusa.com/] Food Fight USA on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/foodfight_usa/] Food Fight USA on X [https://x.com/food_fight_usa] Mentioned in this episode: California Food Safety Act [https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202320240AB418] New York Food Safety and Chemical Disclosure Act [https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/bills/2025/A1556/amendment/F] Yuka food scanning app [https://yuka.io/en/] Ultra-Processed People [https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/451300/ultra-processed-people-by-tulleken-chris-van/9781529160222] by Chris van Tulleken [https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/451300/ultra-processed-people-by-tulleken-chris-van/9781529160222] Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1016268/] (documentary) [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1016268/] Stay in touch: Sign up for Helena’s must-read weekly newsletter: Food Fix [https://foodfix.co/]. Follow American Dish on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/americandishpodcast/] and YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@AmericanDishPodcast]. Send ideas and feedback to info@foodfix.co [info@foodfix.co] Check out Forked [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/forked-presented-by-reap-sow/id1821950125], the food politics podcast Helena co-hosts with the Food & Environment Reporting Network. Credits: This episode was edited by Adrienne Cruz [https://adriennecruz.com/]. Original music by David Bottemiller.

Ayer1 h 0 min
episode What Big Food wants in the ultra-processed foods debate, with Rocco Renaldi artwork

What Big Food wants in the ultra-processed foods debate, with Rocco Renaldi

The debate about ultra-processed foods is loud in America right now, but zoom out, and it's everywhere. Governments around the world are trying to figure out what to do about diet-related disease, and the food and beverage industry is under pressure at every turn. Rocco Renaldi is secretary general of the International Food and Beverage Alliance, the group that brings together some of the world's biggest multinational food companies — Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Mondelēz — for coordinated action on nutrition and public health. He's also an executive at Edelman and is based in Brussels, which gives him a vantage point on these debates that we don’t hear as much stateside. Highlights: – Why the industry sees the UPF debate as a threat to the work already done on product reformulation – What the science does and doesn't tell us about processing as a health risk – Whether a workable, science-based UPF definition is even possible, and who's likely to define it first – How voluntary commitments like global trans fat elimination and salt reduction are going – What MAHA and RFK Jr.'s rhetoric look like from Brussels – GLP-1 drugs as a market force versus warning labels as a policy tool Where to find Rocco Renaldi: International Food and Beverage Alliance (IFBA) [https://www.ifballiance.org/] Mentioned in this episode: NOVA food classification system [https://educhange.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/NOVA-Food-Classification-EduChange.pdf] — the processing-based framework at the center of the UPF debate What we still don't know about ultra-processed foods with Julia Belluz & Kevin Hall [https://pod.link/1880072578/episode/NjAwNjIzOWItZDhiOC00OGM1LTkxYTItNzE4NDNhZmQ2ZDEw?view=apps&sort=popularity] — my earlier conversation with the NIH researcher who studied ultra-processed foods in controlled settings California's work on UPF definitions in school meals [https://www.foodsafetynews.com/2025/10/california-enacts-an-ultra-processed-food-law-but-only-for-public-school-meals/] — the state's ongoing effort to restrict the most harmful ultra-processed foods from school food programs Stay in touch: Sign up for Helena’s must-read weekly newsletter: Food Fix [https://foodfix.co/]. Follow American Dish on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/americandishpodcast/] and YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@AmericanDishPodcast]. Send ideas and feedback to info@foodfix.co [info@foodfix.co] Check out Forked [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/forked-presented-by-reap-sow/id1821950125], the food politics podcast Helena co-hosts with the Food & Environment Reporting Network. Credits: This episode was edited by Adrienne Cruz [https://adriennecruz.com/]. Original music by David Bottemiller.

13 de may de 202645 min
episode Nora LaTorre on why school lunch is the biggest lever for children's health artwork

Nora LaTorre on why school lunch is the biggest lever for children's health

Schools are the largest restaurant chain in America, bigger than Subway, Starbucks, and McDonald's combined. Nearly 100,000 locations, 30 million kids, and roughly 7 billion meals a year. Right now, the lion’s share of the calories served through this system are ultra-processed at a time when there’s growing concern about chronic diseases among children. Nora LaTorre is the CEO of Eat Real, a nonprofit that's transforming school meals scale — certifying school districts against doctor-developed standards and helping food service leaders pivot to fresher, more local, more scratch-cooked food. Since 2019, the organization has grown from one district in one state to more than a million kids across 21 states. This expansion has put LaTorre and her organization at the center of an active debate about what the future of school meals should look like in the U.S. Highlights: – How Eat Real's certification model works and what the two-year journey looks like for school districts – Why better food means more kids eat school lunch (which means more revenue) – The story behind California's AB 1264, which passed with near-unanimous bipartisan support – LaTorre’s take on how federal preemption is a serious threat to food policy progress – What the MAHA moment means for school food – What parents can do to support change at their local school – The infrastructure gap: transforming school food nationally could require tens of billions in kitchen investment Where to find Nora LaTorre: Eat Real [https://eatreal.org/] Parent resources at eatreal.org/parents [https://eatreal.org/parents] Follow Nora on Instagram (@nourishedwithnora) [https://www.instagram.com/nourishedwithnora/] and LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nora-latorre/] Mentioned in this episode: AB 1264 — California's school food bill [https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202520260AB1264] Stay in touch: Sign up for Helena’s must-read weekly newsletter: Food Fix [https://foodfix.co/]. Follow American Dish on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/americandishpodcast/] and YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@AmericanDishPodcast]. Send ideas and feedback to info@foodfix.co [info@foodfix.co] Check out Forked [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/forked-presented-by-reap-sow/id1821950125], the food politics podcast Helena co-hosts with the Food & Environment Reporting Network. Credits: This episode was edited by Adrienne Cruz [https://adriennecruz.com/]. Original music by David Bottemiller.

29 de abr de 202657 min
episode The food industry's MAHA moment with Melissa Hockstad artwork

The food industry's MAHA moment with Melissa Hockstad

HHS Secretary Kennedy says the food industry is poisoning us. The White House shares AI videos of him body slamming a Twinkie. And somehow, the trade group representing the companies making those ultra-processed foods — and thousands of other products Americans buy every day — has to figure out how to respond. The Consumer Brands Association represents the CPG industry, not just food and beverage, but household products and personal care too. It's the largest manufacturing sector in the U.S. by employment — 22.3 million workers, contributing $2.3 trillion to the GDP. And right now, it's contending with one of the most hostile political environments it's ever faced. Melissa Hockstad, the president and CEO of CBA, is at the center of navigating all of this. She's talking about constructive engagement, transparency, and the long game as major food companies try to stay out of the political wrestling ring, at least publicly. Highlights: – How CBA is approaching the Trump administration's anti-Big Food rhetoric, and where they see room for common ground – The Facts Up Front and SmartLabel programs, and why the industry sees transparency on its own terms as a selling point –How MAHA laws in Texas, West Virginia, and beyond have the industry turning to the courts and to Congress – Why CBA thinks "ultra-processed foods" is too complex to define, and what that means for policy – Front-of-pack labeling: where the Biden-era proposed rule stands now and what to expect from FDA under the Trump administration – The affordability argument is not landing the way the industry hoped at the state level Where to find Melissa Hockstad: Follow Melissa Hockstad on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/melissahockstad/] Mentioned in this episode: Consumer Brands Association [https://www.consumerbrandsassociation.org/] Facts Up Front [https://www.factsupfront.org/] SmartLabel [https://www.smartlabel.org/] Stay in touch: Sign up for Helena’s must-read weekly newsletter: Food Fix [https://foodfix.co/]. Follow American Dish on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/americandishpodcast/] and YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@AmericanDishPodcast]. Send ideas and feedback to info@foodfix.co [info@foodfix.co] Check out Forked [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/forked-presented-by-reap-sow/id1821950125], the food politics podcast Helena co-hosts with the Food & Environment Reporting Network. Credits: This episode was edited by Adrienne Cruz [https://adriennecruz.com/]. Original music by David Bottemiller.

15 de abr de 202648 min
episode Why infant formula is not a niche issue with Mallory Whitmore, The Formula Mom artwork

Why infant formula is not a niche issue with Mallory Whitmore, The Formula Mom

Infant formula isn't some niche parenting topic. It's a public health issue, a food security issue, and in many ways an infrastructure issue. The 2022 infant formula crisis was one of the most alarming food system failures in recent memory. Shelves were suddenly empty. Parents were driving across state lines to find cans of formula. The Department of Defense was flying it in on military planes. And most of us — including me — realized we knew almost nothing about how infant formula actually works, where it comes from, or how consolidated the industry really is. Mallory Whitmore, known online as @theformulamom, has spent the last five years building the resource she couldn't find when she needed it most. As an infant feeding technician and now the education lead at Bobbie, a U.S. formula company, she's become one of the most influential voices on formula in the country. With more than 200,000 Instagram followers and a new book, Bottle Service, Mallory aims to give parents guilt-free, evidence-based guidance they're rarely getting anywhere else. Most parents use formula at some point before their babies turn one — it’s high time we stop treating formula as a niche topic. Highlights: – What Mallory learned (and all the info she couldn't find) when breastfeeding didn't work for her first daughter – What it was like to be in the middle of the 2022 Abbott recall, the crisis that exposed just how fragile the U.S. formula supply chain really is – The shame and stigma around formula feeding, and why "breast is best" messaging isn't landing the way it's intended – What parents should actually look for in a formula – Lactose, corn syrup solids, and other misunderstood ingredients – Why some parents believe European formulas are superior, what's actually different, and the real risks of importing your own – Operation Stork Speed: the FDA's first serious look at updating infant formula nutrition standards in decades, and whether the panel's expert guidance will actually translate into policy Where to find Mallory Whitmore: Follow Mallory Whitmore on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/theformulamom/] Check out her book Bottle Service [https://bottleservicebook.com/] Mentioned in this episode: Operation Stork Speed [https://www.fda.gov/food/infant-formula-homepage/operation-stork-speed] Stay in touch: Sign up for Helena’s must-read weekly newsletter: Food Fix [https://foodfix.co/]. Follow American Dish on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/americandishpodcast/] and YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@AmericanDishPodcast]. Send ideas and feedback to info@foodfix.co [info@foodfix.co] Check out Forked [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/forked-presented-by-reap-sow/id1821950125], the food politics podcast Helena co-hosts with the Food & Environment Reporting Network. Credits: This episode was edited by Adrienne Cruz [https://adriennecruz.com/]. Original music by David Bottemiller.

1 de abr de 202646 min