Every
year
a
plethora
of
diet
and
weight
loss
books
are
published.
Many
of
these
books
are
released
in
January—the
"diet
season"—together
they
represent
the
good,
the
bad,
and
the
ugly
of
weight
loss
advice.
Why
do
some
diets
become
so
popular—yet
others
barely
get
noticed?
Is
it
the
quality
of
the
book?
Or
the
proven
effectiveness
of
the
diet?
Is
it
to
do
with
value
for
money?
Spent:
$4.4
million
in
on-line
advertising
in
June
2005
In
my
opinion
these
factors
barely
make
a
dent
in
the
potential
sales.
The
diets
that
become
popular
are
those
that
command
the
mainstream
media.
These
are
the
days
of
the
media
giants,
and
whoever
can
push
a
product
across
the
airwaves
will
generally
sell
the
most
copies.
Sadly,
the
quality
of
the
book
is
irrelevant—many
good
books
get
buried
or
overlooked
in
the
rush
to
be
a
part
of
the
"next
big
thing."
A
Tale
of
Two
Diets
Towards
the
end
of
2005
two
diet
books
were
published.
-
They
both
borrow
heavily
from
the
Mediterranean
food
pyramid.
-
They
both
adopt
a
celebratory
approach
to
food.
-
They
both
include
recipes
based
around
the
wine-growing
region
of
California.
-
They
both
sell
for
$16.50
Ever
heard
of
this?
Those
books
are
The
Sonoma
Diet,
by
Connie
Guttersen,
and
The
California
Wine
Country
Diet
by
Haven
Logan.
The
Sonoma
has
instantly
soared
to
the
bestseller
lists,
whilst
The
Wine
Country
Diet
remains
relatively
unknown.
Why
is
this?
Are
the
buying
public
being
led
like
sheep
to
the
most
slickly
marketed
product?
Media
Monopoly
The
Sonoma
Diet
was
released
on
December
27,
2005.
The
book
offers
some
excellent
balanced
dietary
advice
with
a
gourmet
Mediterranean
theme.
There
are
no
faddish
restrictions
or
gimmicky
ideas—it
presents
a
usable
style
of
eating.
Within
days,
this
book
was
on
the
bestseller
lists
and
currently
ranks
at
number
25
at
USA
Today
(out
of
all
books).
The
diet
has
been
the
subject
of
articles
written
in
many
papers
(even
in
the
Philippines)
and
has
featured
extensively
in
the
10
o'clock
news
on
TV
stations
such
as
Fox
Carolina,
KCTV,
KVVU.
It's
odd
that
a
new
diet
book
qualifies
as
mainstream
news.
Popular
magazines
Better
Homes
and
Gardens
and
Ladies
Home
Journal
have
both
published
a
large
"article"
on
the
Sonoma.
How
on
earth
did
this
diet
get
so
much
attention
in
such
short
a
time?
Here's
the
inside
story:
One
Company:
Many
Faces
The
Sonoma
Diet
is
published
by
Meredith
Books—a
division
of
media
company
Meredith
Corporation.
Meredith
receives
$1.32
Billion
in
revenue
(source).
Meredith
owns
a
lot
of
media
assets:
- 24
subscription
magazines
including
Fitness
Magazine.
- Web
sites
including
AmericanBaby.com,
Parents.com,
More.com,
FamilyCircle.com
- Broadcasting—Meredith
owns
14
TV
stations—with
a
nice
spread
of
CBS,
Fox,
and
NBC
affiliations.
Of
course,
one
of
these
TV
stations
happens
to
be
Fox
Carolina.
And
Meredith
also
owns
KCTV
an
KVVU—oh,
and
one
of
Meredith's
magazines
happens
to
be
Better
Homes
and
Gardens.
Ladies
Home
Journal?
Yes
that's
a
Meredith
magazine
as
well.
So
much
for
the
independent
media.
Publicity
is
Everything
Perhaps
The
California
Wine
Country
Diet
is
a
superior
book,
or
perhaps
not—but
we'll
never
know,
because
our
buying
(and
consuming)
habits
are
driven
by
large
media
conglomerates.
Today
at
Amazon:
Sonoma
Diet:
Ranked
#47
The
California
Wine
Country
Diet:
Ranked
#400,115
The
book
is
available
at
Amazon.
The
authors
website
can
be
found
at:
CaliforniaWineCountryDiet.com
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