Media Blog

Tuna Tales

For starters, who is Michael Byrd and what is he talking about? Well, according to his column in the American Chronicle he's a former physical therapist who doles out nutrition advice that is apparently not well researched and not vetted by a dietitian.

A Friendly Heads Up

Reporters mark your calendars. Tomorrow (Tuesday, January 5th) the EPA will release The National Lakes Assessment a report billed as "the first-ever assessment of the condition of the nation's lakes." It is set to report that nearly 60% the nation's lakes "support healthy biological communities." It is not set to report on anything that has to do with commercial seafood.

Fishiest Stories Of the Year

There were a load of fishy stories this year--

Is Turnabout Fair Play?

The master manipulators at Greenpeace have been unfurling banners and vandalizing property for years in the name of raising their profile in the media and raising funds from their supporters.

Watch Your Language

This morning the CBS Early Show did a short segment with Dr. Jennifer Ashton that mentioned seafood and eating fish while pregnant. While Ashton came pretty close to getting the FDA advice on seafood consumption basically right, she did something that Doctors often do-- lump "tuna" in with higher mercury fish like Shark and Tile Fish. She said:

What You Won't Hear About the Latest CDC Report on Mercury

Over the past few days, we've been seeing sporadic reports about a study that was published by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) that measured the amount of mercury found in the bodies of most Americans.

When Perspective Is The Proverbial Needle In A Hay Stack

Just a quick note for you all this morning.  For starters if you are not familiar with Arthur Allen let's make one thing clear right off the bat-he is no hack. He has a track record of being fair and getting both sides and siding with ground truth science in his journalistic deliberations.

What do U.S. catfish farmers and Vietnam have to do with soy from Illinois?

Let's start from the beginning. Vietnam represents an important market for U.S. soybeans.  U.S. soybean and soybean meal exports to Vietnam totaled nearly $100 million in 2008 and are on the rise. U.S. exports of soybean meal climbed from just 17,469 metric tons in 2004 to almost 115,000 metric tons in 2008, a 558% increase.

What do U.S. catfish farmers and Vietnam have to do with soy from Iowa?

Let's start from the beginning. Vietnam represents an important market for U.S. soybeans.  U.S. soybean and soybean meal exports to Vietnam totaled nearly $100 million in 2008 and are on the rise. U.S. exports of soybean meal climbed from just 17,469 metric tons in 2004 to almost 115,000 metric tons in 2008, a 558% increase.

Why Do Catfish Farmers Have Beef With Montana?

In case you didn't know anti-competition lobbyists representing American catfish farmers are working hard to have a Vietnamese fish called pangasius banned from this country and that spells trouble for Montana cattlemen. Despite the fact that pangasius has been safely imported for years and has caused a grand total of zero illnesses, the bottom-feeding special interest lobby has cooked up a food safety scare story and is shopping it to USDA and anyone in Washington who will listen.
  • A Seafood Lover's Guide
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  • homemade pasta with gorgonzola sauce and shrimp
  • half off nigiri