Man v. Food's Adam Richman: 'I've been vegan for three months'
The food presenter on eating healthily, responsibly, and having respect for animals whether you consume them or not
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.There are a few things you’d never expect Adam Richman to say.
Some of those came out in written form on an Instagram post last year. Uploading a proud picture of his newly slimmed down frame, he came under criticism for including the tag #thinspiration – a term used by people who suffer from eating disorders online to encourage self-harm.
He had “no idea” of the negative connotations that tag had at the time. And he responded to those critics in a way he now considers in hindsight to be “truly inappropriate”.
For a man who is still best known for shoveling oozing racks of barbeque ribs and burgers bigger than most adult heads on Man Versus Food, however, this is probably the next most shocking statement.
“I’ve been vegan for the past three months,” he says of his responsible new relationship with food.
It’s a diet he only adheres to, he says, when he’s training for his other big love: football. He’s currently gearing up to take part in Soccer Aid, a UNICEF celebrity event which has raised upwards of £15million for the children’s charity. One of UNICEF’s big initiatives for 2015 is to reduce by half the proportion of people who suffer from hunger.
“Now does that mean I’m not going to have a steak? No I absolutely will when I want to, but it’s just about picking and choosing my spots, and when I want to have that cow and I wanna have that bacon, I’m going to make it count, I’m going to make it great quality,” he continues.
His drive to lose weight doesn’t correlate with him giving up eating challenges…
“A lot of the weight that I gained was actually after Man V. Food [the last episode of which he shot six years ago]. Because Man V. Food demanded so much physical rigor and discipline for me, that when I began doing Sandwich and Fandemonium and Man V. Food Nation, I was able to snack with impunity and I didn’t have to worry about eating for a challenge. And Soccer Aid was one of the biggest things that kicked me into shape. ”
He knew he needed to lose weight after catching sight of himself in a pilot episode of Fandemonium…
“And I was so unhappy with the way I looked in the rushes that I just said, ‘OK, something has to change’. And I mean being unhappy and doing something about it are not one of the same thing. And so I worked with my doctor and worked with my nutritionist and made a lifestyle change.”
Despite those competitions, he has never been a ‘competitive eater’…
“They’re unionized, I have nothing to do with that.”
In fact, he can’t believe he ever ate that much, either…
“I watch some of those episodes now and I’m going, ‘No way!’ I even talk about it with some of my friends. ‘There’s no way that guy is going to eat all of that!’ But I am that guy!”
Losing weight is far, far simpler a concept than many consider…
“I don’t want to sound glib when I say eat less and exercise more, but simply you have to create a caloric deficit of 3,500 calories to lose a pound. So whether you do that between raising your metabolic rate through exercise and creating your deficit that way, or curtailing your caloric intake, it was simply a matter of creating that deficit and eating incrementally throughout the day, as opposed to a big meal, or a really big meal…”
He posed naked for the centre of Cosmopolitan last year because…
“I worked hard and I worked very hard to get to that place physically, and a) it was a chance for me to celebrate that, and b) it was a chance for me to go, ‘Nernernenerner’ to all the naysayers a little bit. A little bit of a time capsule.”
But hearing he’d inspired children and adults to lose weight too meant far more to him than a risqué shoot in a women's monthly…
“People with kids would see me eat a five pound burritos could also say, ‘Hey he took the bull by the horns and took some initiative, he went from this waist size to this waste size, this jacket size to this jacket size’. I don’t feel like I’m living a restrictive life, I’m not on like a paleo diet, I eat healthily, I budget calorically, I stay active, I live a full life, and I think you can if you take steps to stave off the potentially adverse effects of what you’re eating, you can have your cake and eat it too.”
He claims every restaurant he’s ever featured experienced a 100-to-300 per cent increase in business…
“During one of the worst economic times for small to medium businesses in the United States. The fact that I can provide any kind of boost to them, that’s worth its weight in gold.”
And no, he doesn’t think the undergoing food contests during a time of peak food production – including in America where 14.9 per cent of families are food insecure – promotes irresponsible food waste…
“We were profiling iconic eateries and food challenges that had existed upwards to 100 years before I ever filmed there. They were going to exist whether or not I went there and pointed a camera at them or otherwise.”
In fact, he doesn’t think as a culture we’re irresponsible at all…
“I think responsibility is a subjective thing. I think clearly, the move towards a pesticide-free, cage-free, non-GMO thing, that is a wonderful move in terms of increasing people’s awareness as to where food is produced and brought to market.”
He respects animals, whether he “eats them or otherwise”…
“I’ve never owned a pet that I didn’t adopt. I mean, literally, I adopted pets that were from my Kindergarten that they were going to get rid of. Every pet I’ve ever owned has come from a shelter, so I’ve always done that.”
At the moment, though, he’s meat free…
“Actually, in fairness, because I’m training for football right now, I’ve been vegan for the past three months or so. And for Soccer Aid I went 100 per cent vegan. Now does that mean I’m not going to have a steak? No I absolutely will when I want to, but it’s just about picking and choosing my spots, and when I want to have that cow and I wanna have that bacon, I’m going to make it count, I’m going to make it great quality.”
Unless he finds a great quality piece of bacon behind a bookcase, that is…
“Man Finds Food is really an exploration of hidden gems across America. It’s off the beaten path, hidden restaurants, and off the menu dishes. So competitive eating and food challenges are light years away.We found a restaurant in a house in Chicago, behind a bookcase in a youth hostel, this one, kind of strange, kind of scary concrete building in Boston, and then you go in and the food is breathtaking… I can honestly say it’s the best food and travel show I’ve worked on. I actually think it surpasses Man Versus Food.”
Man Finds Food airs in the UK on Saturdays at 5pm. Richman’s second new show, Food Fighters, airs on Sundays at 5pm
Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article
Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments