1 like 0 dislike
in General Factchecking by
Eat chocolate, lose weight? Widely reported study was part of an elaborate plan to expose junk science and media hype. How does this new diet affect weightloss? How does this media coverage find their sourcing and evidence?

2 Answers

0 like 0 dislike
by Apprentice (1.6k points)
Eating chocolate does not help you lose weight. The article that is link in the original post reports on the chocolate diet trend and how that was a hoax to expose junk science and how it poorly reported on in the media. Science Journalist John Bohannon, who also used to work at Harvard as a biologist, was quoted talking about how journalists need to be better at reporting, and one way to do this was to "shock the system." The rest of the article describes how Bohannon and the rest of the team pulled off proving their chocolate diet "works" and why they did it. However, I did my own research and came upon this Harvard Gazette Article from 2021 (https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2021/06/starting-the-day-off-with-chocolate-may-have-unexpected-benefits/) 6 years after the CBS article. Although the Harvard Gazette article did find that eating chocolate helps burn body fat and lower blood sugar levels, the study was only concentrated on postmenopausal women. In addition, another source from the European Food Information Council (https://www.eufic.org/en/whats-in-food/article/is-dark-chocolate-good-for-weight-loss) discussed how the cases regarded chocolate lowering BMI don't show cause and effect, and the studies that are out there are limited and need to draw more conclusions.
False
by Apprentice (1.1k points)
0 0
This is a strong fact check, it cites multiple articles contradicting the claim, as well as explains how the original article misconstrued studies and evidence with regards to the chocolate diet. I do struggle to understand the section about journalist reporting standards, and how it is relevant to the claim being made, so some more explanation as to why that matters in this case could make your answer stronger.
0 like 0 dislike
by Newbie (480 points)

After digging into the topic, I found that the idea of chocolate helping with weight loss is actually a myth. One of the biggest sources of this misconception came from the so-called "chocolate hoax," which was exposed by Science Magazine correspondent John Bohannon. In an interview with CBSN’s Vladimir Duthiers and Elaine Quijano, Bohannon explained that the story was based on a fake research study created by a non-existent research team. The confusion started because the original study was only testing the effects of bitter chocolate as a dietary supplement, not suggesting that chocolate in general could help with weight loss. So, despite the headlines, there’s no scientific evidence to support the claim that eating chocolate will help you shed pounds. It’s simply not true.

https://www.tamucc.edu/online/video/video-mXLPCfXXZJU.html#:~:text=Science%20Magazine%20correspondent%20John%20Bohannon%20discusses%20the%20%22chocolate%20hoax%22%20that,by%20a%20fake%20research%20team. 

False

Community Rules


Be respectful.

There is bound to be disagreement on a site about misinformation. Assume best intentions on everyone's part.

If you are new to factchecking, take some time to learn about it. "How to Factcheck" has some resources for getting started. Even if you disagree with these materials, they'll help you understand the language of this community better.

News Detective is for uncovering misinformation and rumors. This is not a general interest question-answer site for things someone could Google.

Posting

The title is the "main claim" that you're trying to factcheck.

Example:
Factcheck This: Birds don't exist

If possible, LINK TO to the place you saw the claim.

Answering

LINK TO YOUR EVIDENCE or otherwise explain the source ("I called this person, I found it in this book, etc.")

But don't just drop a link. Give an explanation, copy and paste the relevant information, etc.

News Detective is not responsible for anything anyone posts on the platform.
...