Americans are obsessed with protein. How much do you actually need?

美国人痴迷于蛋白质。你实际上需要多少呢?

Apple News Today

2026-03-28

26 分钟
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单集简介 ...

From Apple News In Conversation: We are in the middle of a protein boom. Protein food products make up a more than $100 billion industry — and it’s still growing. In a new book, Protein: The Making of a Nutritional Superstar, health scholar Samantha King and sociologist Gavin Weedon reveal how marketing, industry interests, and cultural trends — not nutritional science — have turned protein into the most popular nutrient of the moment. King and Weedon sat down with Apple News In Conversation guest host Sam Sanders to talk about the real reason protein is everywhere, and how to think differently about your intake.
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  • This is In Conversation from Apple News.

  • I'm Sam Sanders, in for Shamita Basu.

  • Today, why we're so obsessed with protein.

  • We are in the middle of a protein boom.

  • Protein food products are a $100 billion-plus industry, and it's projected to grow even more in the next few years.

  • You see it.

  • Walk into any grocery store, and you'll find unending lines of products with added protein.

  • Everything from protein popcorn to protein pasta to protein beer.

  • You can even add protein to the foam on top of your latte at Starbucks.

  • If there's a combination of food and extra protein you can dream of, it probably already exists.

  • Like the Buffalo Wild Wings espresso protein-y cocktail with 10 grams of protein.

  • That's health scholar Samantha King.

  • She's written a new book with sociologist Gavin Whedon.

  • It's called Protein, the Making of a Nutritional Superstar.

  • Protein is an essential nutrient for our bodies to build muscle and maintain other functions.

  • It's also found naturally in lots of foods.

  • And in their book, Sammy and Gavin argue that our obsession with protein consumption is driven a lot more by industry

  • and marketing and cultural forces than by actual nutritional science.

  • I think it helps to mark out the distinction between the idea that protein is something we need,

  • which is true, but it 's in everything we eat.