Archive for January 27, 2010
Is Bottled Water Better Than Tap?
Americans Are Spending Billions on a Drink That’s Virtually Free
It started with Perrier. Somehow, a French company convinced people it’s cool to buy bottled water. Today, Evian has surpassed Perrier in sales and now it’s the chic French water of choice. Why? It costs about 5 bucks a gallon! Why do people pay so much for something they can get virtually free?
If they’re not buying Evian, they buy Aquafina and Dasani and the dozens of new brands that are jumping into this billion-dollar business, including bizarre ones like Venus, the Water for Women, and Trump Ice, with “The Donald” scowling on the label. I’d have to be very thirsty to buy that.
Many people say they buy bottled waters because they taste better. We spoke with people in New York City, asking them why they liked bottled better than tap water.
“I drink Dasani. It tastes good, it tastes crisp, like — natural,” one girl said.
“I think tap water kind of tastes like sewer,” said another.
People also say they drink bottled water because they believe it’s safer than tap water.
One man told me he’s the only one “who’s brave enough” to drink tap water at home. His family’s afraid to drink tap water because of germs, he said.
At recent Earth Day celebrations, a lot of people told us they believe tap water is unhealthy. “As a parent I feel more comfortable giving her bottled water,” one father told us.
Bottled water, we were told, is cleaner, safer, healthier.
Watching bottled water ads, you’d think that tap water might not be healthy. But it’s not true.
“20/20″ took five bottles of national brands of bottled water and a sample of tap water from a drinking fountain in the middle of New York City and sent them to microbiologist Aaron Margolin of the University of New Hampshire to test for bacteria that can make you sick, like e. coli.
“There was actually no difference between the New York City tap water and the bottled waters that we evaluated,” he said.
Many scientists have run tests like that and have consistently found that tap water is as good for you as bottled waters that cost 500 times more.
This is the Book worth to read: Beneath the Lion’s gaze
by Euan Kerr, Minnesota Public Radio
But the experience was so traumatic she has very clear memories of what happened.
“I remembered so vividly my life in Ethiopia, and I remember very specific moments and those stayed with me here,” she said. “And as I grew older I started wanting to put them into context, to try to find a historical and political explanation for what I remembered.”
So she wrote “Beneath the Lion’s Gaze,” a critically-acclaimed novel about a family living through the Ethiopian revolution. The story also tells of the last days of Hailie Selassie before his death in prison.
Maaza Mengiste, who now lives in New York, told Euan Kerr even though many people wanted the Emperor gone, his removal was traumatic.
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