CONSPIRACY THEORY: FOOD COMPANIES CONFLICTING DATA

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Do you think some food companies get on sites like this and others and add entries to their foods that are much healthier than they really are to make it harder for you to find the true amounts? I double check everything I enter but I notice for example McDonalds has a wide range on certain food items entered multiple times that are wrong. Sometimes you have to really dig to find the right one and many times there are only a couple of confirms on them! Seriously, you know A LOT of people are eating those same items, so where are all the multiple confirms at? Seems like they have been MAGICALLY disappearing?? hmmm.

Powerade is another example. The powerade mountain blast that has been entered and confirmed by people to have 56grams of carbs for a 32oz container yet only 200 calories listed. If you do the math, a carb equals 4 calories, 56x4=225 calories!

I even looked at a 32oz powerade container at the store and it clearly says on it 225 calories! It's either they are now getting away with stating less calories on certain containers or are coming up with a new way to count carbs or something.

CARBS = 4 calories
PROTEIN = 9 calories
FAT = 9

You can always double check based on that.
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Replies

  • weightlossguy01
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    bump
  • tigerlily8045
    tigerlily8045 Posts: 415 Member
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    I always love too when people put in just the calories for an item but nothing else. um hello? If you are going to bother putting it in please fill out all of the info. You are not the only one that may use that item. I have edited a few things and always say what or why i did it.

    Maybe for some products they have redone their menu or product and that equals less calories. However like you said some are just wrong..lol
  • weightlossguy01
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    I took a screenshot of it, 5 people confirmed it being accurate.....

    Powerade Mountain Blast (ON MYFITNESSPAL)
    http://imgur.com/9Ygb2

    56g carb x 4 = 225 calories NOT 200. Do the math, so I don't understand that at all.
  • poodlelaise
    poodlelaise Posts: 149 Member
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    I know one thing we have to watch out for is the number of servings in a package. By law, the manufacturer must provide as much weight as they state on the package as a minimum. So many put in a little extra. If the package says it contains two servings, you eat half, and believe you have eaten one serving worth of calories, it is not unusual that you may have eaten considerably more.

    The only thing I have tested this on was a single serving honey bun. It weighed 30% more than the package said, so there were actually 1.3 servings in the package instead of the one it listed.
  • weightlossguy01
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    I know one thing we have to watch out for is the number of servings in a package. By law, the manufacturer must provide as much weight as they state on the package as a minimum. So many put in a little extra. If the package says it contains two servings, you eat half, and believe you have eaten one serving worth of calories, it is not unusual that you may have eaten considerably more.

    The only thing I have tested this on was a single serving honey bun. It weighed 30% more than the package said, so there were actually 1.3 servings in the package instead of the one it listed.
    That is actually one thing I really fear! I've read that as well. Just because it says 400 calories on it, they don't all weigh exactly the same and you might actually be getting closer to 450 or even 500!

    Same goes for slices of pizza as well. You just never really know.
  • cls_333
    cls_333 Posts: 206 Member
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    Last night I had a Gianelli Hot Italian Sausage. It said a serving was one link, but it also had (3.5g) beside it. Still you imagine since the links are pre-cut, that one is a serving. Then it said one link was 190 calories. Well, I love Hoffman German franks, and I know they are like 230 calories, and they're a lot smaller. So I got suspicious & started figuring out the weight of the whole package, how many were in there, etc, and it worked out to each link being 342 cals, 5.6 oz each. I do think they purposely misstate the label. One link? Ya, the size of a breakfast sausage link, maybe! Guess we all need to get food scales. :grumble:
  • weightlossguy01
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    Last night I had a Gianelli Hot Italian Sausage. It said a serving was one link, but it also had (3.5g) beside it. Still you imagine since the links are pre-cut, that one is a serving. Then it said one link was 190 calories. Well, I love Hoffman German franks, and I know they are like 230 calories, and they're a lot smaller. So I got suspicious & started figuring out the weight of the whole package, how many were in there, etc, and it worked out to each link being 342 cals, 5.6 oz each. I do think they purposely misstate the label. One link? Ya, the size of a breakfast sausage link, maybe! Guess we all need to get food scales. :grumble:

    I AGREE! One thing that suprised me recently was that Whataburger sweet tea has around 450 calories for a large and when I used to go there I'd drink 2 of those. I'd drink one there and get a refill to go, that's 900 calories!

    If you look up McDonalds sweet tea, there's is supposedly 280 or so calories for a large and I know for a fact that McDonalds sweets tea is probably 2x sweeter than Whataburgers sweet tea, they really pour the sugar in it! Sometimes I have to ask them to dillute it!

    So I know for a fact that there is no way on earth a McDonald's large tea is 280 calories but that's what their website claims. I think the number they turn in is different than real world preparation for it. You have to be careful, and just like you did, compare what the competition is showing as their amounts if it seems too good to be true.
  • GasMasterFlash
    GasMasterFlash Posts: 2,206 Member
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    tin_foil_hat.gif
  • pixiechick8321
    pixiechick8321 Posts: 284 Member
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    Food scale + overestimate = almost safe

    I agree though that this drives me nuts, especially when I KNOW the website for the restaurant has a higher/different number than what people say on here.

    I wish there was a way to delete all inaccurate data...
  • CaWaterBug8
    CaWaterBug8 Posts: 1,040 Member
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    tin_foil_hat.gif

    I feel like that hat needs to be more pointy.
  • BrettPGH
    BrettPGH Posts: 4,720 Member
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    Know that nothing can ever be 100% accurate. That doesn't mean anyone is out to get you. That's just life. An extra 30 calories you didn't account for does not ruin your day, it's hardly a blip.

    Stop looking for things/people to blame and do the work.
  • GasMasterFlash
    GasMasterFlash Posts: 2,206 Member
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    tin_foil_hat.gif
    I feel like that hat needs to be more pointy.
    Common misconception. Having points only helps the gov't and aliens to read your thoughts.
  • becoming_a_new_me
    becoming_a_new_me Posts: 1,860 Member
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    tinfoil_hat_shazam.png
  • cheesy_blasters
    cheesy_blasters Posts: 283 Member
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    Ugh, I never bothered to compare like that. I don't eat a lot of packaged stuff but I never really thought to check.

    I usually over estimate how much i eat or weigh it exactly and there's always some extra room in my calorie macro so I'm probably fine but still. It's nice to be accurate!

    That being said I don't believe that multi-national corps are trolling every freaking weight loss site trying to spread false info about a few calories. I think some people put in the wrong info/don't know how/get lazy/etc.

    Stop eating packaged stuff if you're so worried.
  • roachhaley
    roachhaley Posts: 978 Member
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    you think a multi billion dollar chain restaurant needs to get on a website and trick a few people into eating there more than once? ok.
  • _tiifyjo_
    _tiifyjo_ Posts: 118 Member
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    I know one thing we have to watch out for is the number of servings in a package. By law, the manufacturer must provide as much weight as they state on the package as a minimum. So many put in a little extra. If the package says it contains two servings, you eat half, and believe you have eaten one serving worth of calories, it is not unusual that you may have eaten considerably more.

    The only thing I have tested this on was a single serving honey bun. It weighed 30% more than the package said, so there were actually 1.3 servings in the package instead of the one it listed.

    For years I thought one serving of Ramen noodles was the whole package. When I started MFP and really started reading labels I realized I was very wrong lol same with energy drinks, I thought one can was one serving but many of them are multiple servings.
  • MelMena
    MelMena Posts: 152 Member
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    So then why aren't you entering all of your own info and not relying on what has already been done? If you have the info in front of you then put it in and use it. Pretty sure there is no conspiracy theory.
  • UsedToBeHusky
    UsedToBeHusky Posts: 15,229 Member
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    Why do people agonize over accurate calorie counts?

    I mean, I can understand where you are coming from if it is sabotage (though to me that seems a bit paranoid). But... in reality, MFP can't accurately predict your TDEE, and therefore, is only projecting a potential calorie count to create a deficit. If we are already estimating in the first place, then why do we need to weigh out every morsel we put into our mouths?

    Again, the kind of corporate espionage that you have described is jacked up, but I seriously doubt they are too worried about MFP users choosing something other than McDonald's when MFP users only make up the tiniest fraction of their total market share.

    I just don't understand obsessing about calorie counts when we are already estimating in the first place.
  • Rhea30
    Rhea30 Posts: 625 Member
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    I know one thing we have to watch out for is the number of servings in a package. By law, the manufacturer must provide as much weight as they state on the package as a minimum. So many put in a little extra. If the package says it contains two servings, you eat half, and believe you have eaten one serving worth of calories, it is not unusual that you may have eaten considerably more.

    The only thing I have tested this on was a single serving honey bun. It weighed 30% more than the package said, so there were actually 1.3 servings in the package instead of the one it listed.

    Many food items say "about" with how many servings they are, that's probably why they do for you had stated. I never really thought about it or paid much attention to that until reading this. Like "Servings Per Container about 35" that's on my peanut butter jar. Its probably good to measure out or weight the item or whatever then, I'm guessing.
  • Rhea30
    Rhea30 Posts: 625 Member
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    I know one thing we have to watch out for is the number of servings in a package. By law, the manufacturer must provide as much weight as they state on the package as a minimum. So many put in a little extra. If the package says it contains two servings, you eat half, and believe you have eaten one serving worth of calories, it is not unusual that you may have eaten considerably more.

    The only thing I have tested this on was a single serving honey bun. It weighed 30% more than the package said, so there were actually 1.3 servings in the package instead of the one it listed.

    For years I thought one serving of Ramen noodles was the whole package. When I started MFP and really started reading labels I realized I was very wrong lol same with energy drinks, I thought one can was one serving but many of them are multiple servings.

    I haven't checked Ramen noodles but I thought they were one serving LOL. I have to go look now!