Forever Shelfmates
SHOW NOTES BY CHERYL Episode 12: Nonfiction Fatty Fatty Boom Boom by Rabia Chaudry We’re in favor of supporting independent bookstores! If you don’t know your local indie, check out this link [https://bookshop.org/books/fatty-fatty-boom-boom-a-memoir-of-food-fat-and-family/9781643750385] if you want to get your own copy of Fatty Fatty Boom Boom from a website that supports all indies. Alternatively, here is a link [https://www.workman.com/products/fatty-fatty-boom-boom/hardback] directly to the publisher’s website with other options to purchase your own copy. A few things: Rabia Chaudry has done a bunch of really cool things: she’s part of the Undisclosed podcast [https://www.undisclosed-podcast.com/] that discusses wrongful convictions, she wrote a book [https://rabiachaudry.com/adnans-story/] about Adnan Syed - a family friend that was (wrongfully) convicted of murder, and she was part of an HBO docuseries [https://www.hbo.com/the-case-against-adnan-syed] about the Adnan Syed case (which is what spurred her weight loss journey at the end of Fatty Fatty Boom Boom.) In this book, they refer to her podcast as the Serial podcast. Here’s [https://serialpodcast.org/] a link to that podcast. Don’t ask us why it’s not on her website. Adnan Syed has even been in the news [https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2022/10/13/adnan-syed-serial-q-and-a/] recently when the charges against him were dropped. The history of American food/cuisine [https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/what-is-american-food-history/index.html] is very interesting. Colorism is real and it is rampant around the world, not just in Pakistan. Here’s [https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2020/07/09/860912124/black-lives-matter-gets-indians-talking-about-skin-lightening-and-colorism] an article about the history of colorism in South Asia (specifically India) and the history of the use of skin lightening cream. Super Size Me [https://youtu.be/zKQGAv8gtBA] is a 2004 documentary film about a man who eats McDonalds for three meals a day for a whole month to determine if fast food causes real harm to people’s health. The American chicken industry has an interesting history [https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/aug/17/from-farm-to-factory-the-unstoppable-rise-of-american-chicken] as well. Don’t read this unless you’re sure you want to know. Just in case you read the previous article and now feel compelled to change your eating habits, here’s [https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/becoming-a-vegetarian] some introductory information about vegetarianism. Cheryl was totally wrong about when Coca Cola contained cocaine [https://www.justthinktwice.gov/article/did-coca-cola-ever-contain-cocaine]. It was not the 1980s but the 1880s, when it was first invented and cocaine was legal. Abusers can put on a different face [https://www.loveisrespect.org/resources/too-good-to-be-true/] before they start the abuse. If you or someone you know needs help getting out of a domestic abuse situation, there is help. Click here [https://www.thehotline.org/get-help/] for the National Domestic Abuse Hotline. What a book to finish out the season. From the bottom of our hearts, Mirele, Aaron and I (Cheryl) are so grateful that you’ve been on this journey with us, whether this is your first episode, twelfth episode, or any number in between. Thank you for your incredible support during our first season! Can’t wait to be back in your ear holes with some new books (and possibly some new voices) in Season 2! This podcast is powered by Pinecast [https://pinecast.com].
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