The show is running right now again, so I'll sit through it to see if I'm mistaken about what he's actually saying.
Watched the re-air at 8:30 CDT and he wasn't that bad, though I concur with (what I read to be) your assessment in the OP that while nutritional conventional wisdom is good, we shouldn't ignore, you know, the people who have facts and data supporting them.
I guess he's never heard of 'diet' pop, which is basically water and some citric acid.
As someone who drinks Diet Coke in lieu of water on a daily basis, let me say there's nothing wrong with his objection as long as it's qualified. HFC sodas contribute to obesity (our would in my case - I probably save 50k kcal a year, and no, I don't make it up with other sweets) so he's basically correct. If you want fruit juice or caffine, there's alternatives much better for you than Sierra Mist.
-"This is the wisdom of your grandmother, your great-grandmother."
Name that fallacy.
The appeal to antiquity in this case is not problematic if he's contrasting the serving of prepared foods vs. processed foods. I'd agree with him that prepared meals are better than packaged and processed ones.
-"We have a national eating disorder, and we're getting very sick because of what we eat."
Axiomatic and concur with your comment.
-"I don't know that much about food, I'm not an expert."
He sure gives a lot of advice about food for someone who isn't an expert. Three books on it were mentioned in the interview.
Couldn't agree more, see my above stopped clock comments and the one in this post.
-"We've been listening to scientists too long, and their claims, and the nutrition claims the companies make."
Why lump these things together? This still sounds as bad as the first time I heard it.
This didn't strike me as damning when I heard it because of his follow up comments quoted below... again with caveats.
-"Cereal that promotes the idea they can improve your child's attention at school."
Claims of advertisers are
not claims of scientists! Wrong.[/quote]
Agreed. He's conflating claims of marketing people with those of the folks in the lab at Quaker Oats, Post, etc. with those of sicentists. Egregious logical fallacy, but he does have a point.
He also said what amounted to, eat apples, but don't eat on the go, at your desk, or in car. Those are the only places I eat apples. It you're eating healthy, it really doesn't matter where you eat it. The problem is that if you're eating on the go, you tend to not be thinking about what you're eating and eating too much. It isn't wear you eat, or how long it took you to prepare it, it's what and how much overall you're eating. His is a false confusion of correlation and causation.
This I think you're overthinking and applying an unfair weight of comparison. He's clearly not talking about eating apples in your car, but fast food.
-"A land with lots of herring, can get along with few doctors."
Truly a WTF moment. That's one of the rules from his new book. Is this epic correlation/causation fail, or am I missing some point? Sure, herring can be good for you (something those stupid scientists tell us by the way), but you'll still need plenty of doctors. Besides, has he not heard of overfishing?
Why are the popular advocates of some very real issues so damn stupid?
Coveyesque in it's in insipidness, but was he referring to the diet of people in Northern Europe or the socialized health care? That point was never made clear.
And in case it seems like I'm an apologist for him, I think he's someone talking about things he's not an expert in who is recycling "common sense" and makes a few good points among not woo or hokum per se, but arguments a critical thinking might frame with more data and less "wisdom".